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Storm (comics)

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This article is about the X-Men character. For the British/Dutch comic book character of the same name, see Storm (Don Lawrence).
Storm</tr></td><tr style="text-align: center; font-size: 90%;"><td>

Image:TurnerStorm.jpg
Detail from the variant cover of Black Panther #18.
Art by Michael Turner.

PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceGiant-Size X-Men #1
(May 1975)
Created byLen Wein
Dave Cockrum

<tr style="vertical-align: top;"><td>Alter ego</td><td>Ororo Munroe</td></tr><tr style="vertical-align: top;"><td>Affiliations</td><td>Black Panther, X-Men, Morlocks, Hellfire Club, X-Treme Sanctions Executive</td></tr><tr style="vertical-align: top;"><td>Abilities</td><td>

  • Weather manipulation
  • Flight
  • Invulnerable to the effects of the weather and extreme heat and cold
  • Posesses latent natural magic abilities</td></tr>
Characteristics

Storm (real name Ororo Munroe) is a fictional Marvel Comics superhero and a prominent member of the X-Men. She was created by writer Len Wein and artist Dave Cockrum, and first appeared in Giant-Size X-Men #1 (May 1975), becoming one of the first black female superheroes.

Storm has the mutant power to control the weather and can fly at high speeds. She was consistently a member of some X-Men battalion from 1975 on, often serving as the team’s leader. She has been featured in almost every X-Men animated series and video game and has a theme ride named after her at the Universal Orlando Resort. Actress Halle Berry plays her in the X-Men films.

Contents

[edit] Publication history

[edit] 1970s

Giant-Size X-Men #1, 1975. Art by Gil Kane & Dave Cockrum. Storm is flying in the top right-hand corner.

Storm, a.k.a. Ororo Munroe first appeared in 1975 in the famous Giant Size X-Men #1 comic, written by Len Wein and pencilled by Dave Cockrum, in which a battle against the living island Krakoa is used to replace the all-WASP, first-generation X-Men of the 1960s with a slew of international X-Men.<ref>Giant Size X-Men #1, 1975, Marvel Comics, writer Len Wein</ref>Storm was an amalgamation of several characters Cockrum intended to use for the Legion of Superheroes. In an 1999 interview, Cockrum said:

   
Storm (comics)
The original black female in the group was to have been called The Black Cat. She had Storm's costume but without the cape, and a cat-like haircut with tufts for ears. [...A]ll of a sudden all of these other female cat characters had sprung up—Tigra, The Cat, Pantha—so I figured that we'd better overhaul this one! She wound up getting white hair, the cape, and becoming Storm. [...] I wanted to put the white hair on her, everybody said that she'd wind up looking like somebody's grandmother. I said, "Trust me."<ref>Cooke, John B.. The Marvel Days of the Co-Creator of the New X-Men. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>
   
Storm (comics)

Chris Claremont, who followed up Wein as the writer of the flagship title Uncanny X-Men in 1975, embraced Storm and started writing many X-Men stories (most prominently the Dark Phoenix Saga), with Storm as an important supporting character. This was a harbinger of things to come, as Claremont stayed the main writer of that comic book for the next 16 years and conseqentially wrote the most of the publications containing Storm.

In Uncanny X-Men #102 (December 1976), Claremont established her backstory. Ororo's mother, N'Dare, is the princess of a tribe in Kenya and the descendant of a long line of Africans with white hair, blue eyes and a natural gift for sorcery, which Storm's Egyptian ancestor, Ashake, is expert in. N'Dare falls in love with and marries African American photojournalist David Munroe. They move to Harlem in uptown New York City, where they have Ororo, and then to Egypt during the Suez War, where they are killed in a botched aircraft attack and leave six-year-old Ororo as an orphan. There, her violent claustrophobia is also established, result of being buried under tons of rubble after that attack. She then becomes a skilled thief in Cairo under the benign Achmed el-Gibar, and wanders into the Serengeti as a young woman, where she is worshipped as a goddess before Professor X recruits her for the X-Men.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #102, December 1976, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref>

Claremont further fleshed out her backstory in Uncanny X-Men #117 (January 1979), retroactively adding that Professor X (who had recruited her in Giant Size X-Men #1 of 1975, see above) already meets her when she is a child street thief in Cairo.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #117, January 1979, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> In the following years, Claremont portrayed Storm as a serene, independent character. Although Storm initially is written having trouble adjusting to Western culture, particularly the sort represented by her sometimes-vicious teammate Wolverine, she finds a home and family among the X-Men such as telepath / telekinetic Jean Grey and steel-skinned Piotr Rasputin who become not only her best friends, but also a surrogate sister and brother.

[edit] 1980s

Claremont established Storm as the leader of the X-Men in Uncanny X-Men #139 (November 1980),<ref>Uncanny X-Men #139, November 1980, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> a position she has held in various incarnations ever since. He wrote Storm as a strong, independent character, who especially harbours motherly feelings for the youngest X-Man, 13-year old Kitty Pryde. In Marvel Team-Up #100 (December 1980), Claremont wrote a short story in which he retroactively established that Storm, then 12 years old, saves a young Black Panther from racist thugs when they both are in Kenya.<ref>Marvel Team-Up #100, December 1980, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> This story would later become a base for later writers to establish a deeper relationship between both characters.<ref name="cbrmarriage"> Weiland, Jonah. Hudlin & Dickey talk Black Panther / Storm Wedding. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

In the early eighties, adventures of Storm written by Claremont included fighting the parasitic Aliens-inspired aliens called the Brood, in which Storm is infected with a Brood egg and contemplates suicide, but then experiences a last-minute save by the benign Acanti aliens.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #162-#166, September 1982-February 1983, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> Furthermore, in the Morlocks story line of 1983, in Uncanny X-Men #170 (June 1983), Storm fights super-strong mutant Callisto for the leadership of the disfigured mutants, beats her by impaling her through the heart and almost kills her.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #170, June 1983, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref>

In Uncanny X-Men #173, October 1983, a notable move was made by changing Storm's outward appearance: writer Claremont and artist Paul Smith created a new look, abandoning her old costume for black leather top and pants, and changing her former veil of white hair into a punk mohawk.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #173, October 1983, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> In the story, Storm's outlook on life darkens after her struggles with the Brood. Claremont further stirred up matters when he wrote an arc in which her soon-to-be romantic interest, Forge, develops a mutant power neutralizing gun. The intended target is fellow X-Man Rogue, who had been written by Claremont as a character with a criminal backstory. Therefore, she is still believed to be a terrorist, and in addition recently has attacked S.H.I.E.L.D agents. When the shady U.S. government operative Henry Gyrich aims at Rogue, he accidentally hits Storm, taking away her powers. Forge saves Storm from death and takes her back to his home in Dallas, Texas to recover. With his help, she adjusts to life without her powers, and they slowly fall in love. When she finds out Forge has built it (she accidentally overhears a phone conversation between Forge and Gyrich), she is heartbroken and leaves him.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #185-186, 1984, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref>

However, Claremont wrote further arcs that established her character strength, most notably that power loss did not lead her to being a lesser fighter. In Uncanny X-Men #201 (1986), he let depowered Storm win against Cyclops for the leadership of the X-Men.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #201, 1986, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref>

In the late eighties, Claremont wrote arcs in which Storm temporarily joins the shady Hellfire Club (1987),<ref>New Mutants (vol. 1) #51, 1987, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> is trapped in another dimension with Forge and regains her elemental powers as well as her long hair,<ref>Uncanny X-Men #225-227, January-March 1988, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> is captured and rendered amnesiac by the evil robot Nanny,<ref>Uncanny X-Men #248, September 1989, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> is hunted by the evil telepath Shadow King and framed for murder,<ref>Uncanny X-Men #253-257, November 1989 - January 1990, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> and finally returns to thieving before regaining her memories back.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #265-267, August 1990 - September 1990, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> In one well-known arc, The X-Tinction Agenda, she is kidnapped to the mutant-exploiting fictional nation of Genosha and is temporarily transformed into a brainwashed mutate, but then regains her memory.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #270-271, 1991, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref>

[edit] 1990s

In October 1991, the X-Men franchise was relaunched, centering on the new adjectiveless X-Men (vol. 2) comic. Claremont wrote her as the leader as the X-Men's Gold Team (the other team, Blue, was led by Cyclops). When Claremont, left the X-Men comic after 16 years since his debut in Uncanny X-Men #94 (1975),<ref>X-Men (vol 2) #3, December 1991, Marvel Comics, was the last X-Men comic Chris Claremont wrote after 16 consecutive years</ref> he was replaced by Jim Lee, who continued portraying her in this fashion. In the sister title Uncanny X-Men, now under Scott Lobdell, Lobdell made Forge propose to Storm in 1992, but due to a misunderstanding, Lobdell made Forge rescind his offer before Storm could say yes.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #289-290, June 1992, Marvel Comics, writer Scott Lobdell</ref> Lobdell waited until November 1993 before he made a deeply hurt Storm and Forge make up with each other.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #306, November 1993, Marvel Comics, writer Scott Lobdell</ref>

In 1995, Lobdell then wrote an arc which pitted the X-Men against the Morlocks again. As with Callisto decades before, Lobell let Storm end the battle by again mortally wounding her opponent at the heart, this time ripping out the heart of the Morlock girl Marrow, who had fixed a bomb to it.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #325, October 1995, Marvel Comics, writer Scott Lobdell</ref> Marrow would survive due to her second heart, and would later regret her actions, make up with Storm and join the X-Men.

In February 1996, Storm got her first miniseries, the eponymous Storm #1-#4 (writer Warren Ellis, February - May 1996). In these four issues, Ellis wrote a story in whic Storm is sucked into an alternate dimension and pitted against villain Mikhail Rasputin.<ref>Storm #1-#4, February - May 1996, Marvel Comics, writer Warren Ellis</ref>

[edit] 2000s

In X-Treme X-Men (July 2001), conceived by a newly-reinstated Chris Claremont, Storm was written the leader of this team of more street-wise X-Men (as opposed to its sister titles, Uncanny X-Men and New X-Men, which featured more straight-laced X-Men). In the period until its end in issue #46 (June 2004), Claremont continued to write her as the central character. Storm enjoys a brief flirtation with younger fellow X-Man Slipstream, is kidnapped by the intergalactic warlord Khan who wants to make her his queen, but she manages to defeat him. She also becomes leader of the X-Treme Sanctions Executive, a special police task force of mutants policing mutants given worldwide authority.<ref>X-Treme X-Men #1-#46, July 2001 - June 2004, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref>

In the 2005 House of M storyline of Brian Michael Bendis, due to the Scarlet Witch's magicks, 98% of the mutants lost their powers, but Storm did not lose hers.<ref>House of M, 2005, Marvel Comics, writer Brian Michael Bendis </ref>

Further Storm storylines involved a repeated use of retcon. In the 2005 Mark Sumerak miniseries Ororo: Before the Storm #1-#4, her backstory with Achmed el-Gibar was retold in more detail.<ref>Ororo: Before the Storm #1-#4, August 2005 - November 2005, Marvel Comics, writer Mark Sumerak</ref> In 2006, Marvel Comics decided to marry Ororo with fellow African super hero Black Panther. Collaborating writer Eric Jerome Dickey explained that it was a move to explicitly target the female and African-American audience.<ref>newsarama.com. Black Panther / Storm wedding conference. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref> In order to execute this sudden change of status quo — under Claremont and Lobdell, Storm had been written nurturing a long-standing relationship with fellow X-Men Forge — the writers based the romance on one short story written 25 years ago, namely Marvel Team-Up #100 (1980, see above).<ref name="cbrmarriage">

In the Storm (vol. 2) miniseries of writer Eric Jerome Dickey (April - November 30, 2006), a far-reaching retcon was set up in which was established that Storm has had a romantic relationship with fellow African superhero Black Panther when they have been teenagers.<ref>Storm #1-#6 miniseries, April - November 2006, Marvel Comics, writer Eric Jerome Dickey</ref> Collaborating writer Axel Alonso (editor of Black Panther) even went so far to state: "Eric's story, for all intents and purposes (...) is Ororo's origin story", acknowledging they were rewriting her history.<ref name="cbrmarriage">

This retroactively added relationship led to the marriage of the two most prominent black African Marvel Comics heroes in Black Panther #18 by writer Reginald Hudlin, July 2006, as a tie-in to the Civil War storyline.<ref>Black Panther #18, July 2006, Marvel Comics, writer Reginald Hudlin</ref>. Remarkably, Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Joe Quesada was highly supportive of this marriage, stating it was the Marvel Comics equivalent of the marriage of "Lady Diana and Prince Charles", and he expected both characters to emerge strengthened. In comparison, Quesada is critical of the Marvel Comics marriage of Spider-Man and Mary Jane Watson, feeling that on a "story level, Spider-Man gets harmed".<ref name="quesada2006">Quesada, Joe. Joe's Friday 31, a weekly Q&A with Joe Quesada. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

[edit] Historical significance

In historical perspective, Storm deserves mention because she became one of the first black superheroes in the big two comic book houses, Marvel Comics and DC Comics. Within these two companies, her 1974 debut was only preceded by a few male black characters. In Marvel Comics, preceding characters were Gabe Jones (debuted in 1963), Black Panther (1966) and Spider-Man supporting characters Joe Robertson (1967) and Luke Cage (1972). In DC Comics, she was preceded by Teen Titans member Mal Duncan who debuted in 1970 and Green Lantern wielder John Stewart (1971), but she preceded DC's other black heroes, Tyroc who debuted in 1976, and Black Lightning who debuted in 1977.

Storm shares noteable similarities with Lt. Uhura from the popular science fiction series Star Trek, who first appeared nine years before in 1966. Uhura is also a black female, has a similar name and is also written as a character with Kenyan origins. In an 2003 essay, PopMatters columnist Lynne D. Johnson regards them as the two prime examples of black female pop culture figures. In her text, she makes the point that despite best intentions, popular culture often depicts black women in a stereotyped way: either as a talented, but harmless entertainer (Uhura) or as a tough, highly attractive enforcer (Storm).<ref>Johnson, Lynne D.. Black Thoughtware. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

In 2006, Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Joe Quesada called Storm "one of the greatest female characters ever and certainly the greatest African character ever conceived".<ref>newsarama.com. Black Panther / Storm wedding conference. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

[edit] Powers and abilities

When Len Wein and Dave Cockrum created Storm in 1975, they designed her as a mutant with the psionic ability to control the weather, especially with the gift to summon her eponymous storms. When using her powers, artists have consistently depicted that her eyes illuminate a white color and aura.

Subsequent writers have made liberal use of her weather manipulating powers. Marvel.com states that she can control wind, lightning, summon all manner of precipitation, reduce the temperature of her environment and fly at high speeds. Her powers also work the other way, enabling her to calm all weather precipitations. Storm is also portrayed as highly immune to the effects of all weather, most notably lightning and extreme heat and cold, and she can alter her visual perceptions so as to see the universe as multi-colored energy patterns and the factors behind weather. Her abilities are limited by her willpower and strength of her body, and she cannot summon completely unnatural precipitations.<ref name="officalmarvelpage">marvel.com. Storm: Marvel Universe. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

Ever since Chris Claremont established her backstory in Uncanny X-Men #102 (December 1976), Storm is consistently portrayed as a skilled thief and a gifted hand-to-hand fighter. She is fluent in both Arabic and Swahili. Storm always carries with her a set of lock-picks and her ancestral ruby, which is capable of inter-dimensional transportation with the help of Ororo's lightning.<ref name="officalmarvelpage">marvel.com. Storm: Marvel Universe. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

In addition, since the same Uncanny X-Men #102 issue, Storm has been portrayed as being violently claustrophobic. Over the decades, writers have often used this as a plot device in order to trap Storm. Storm is also emotionally attuned to the weather; when she is very angry, it has been underlined by writers by having a storm brew up above her.<ref name="officalmarvelpage">marvel.com. Storm: Marvel Universe. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref> In Black Panther #21 (2006) by writer Reginald Hudlin, she is hinted to be a possible so-called Omega-level mutant, a fictional description for mutants of the ultimate power level. Hudlin made Iron Man and the X-Men hint at this, even letting them compare her to the world-devouring Phoenix.<ref>Black Panther #21, 2006, Marvel Comics, writer Reginald Hudlin</ref>

[edit] Other versions

[edit] Ultimate Storm

In the Ultimate Marvel continuity of Ultimate X-Men, created by Mark Millar and Joe Quesada in February 2001, Storm, a.k.a. Ororo Munroe, is a founding member of the X-Men. In his stint until July 2003, Millar created a much more belligerent version of Storm, establishing she was an illegal immigrant from Morocco who steals cars for a living and is located in Harlem before joining the X-Men. She was also written as much less powerful: at first, she is hardly able to summon more than a lightning bolt before passing out,<ref>Ultimate X-Men #1, February 2001, Marvel Comics, writer Mark Millar</ref> and still has to learn to control her powers. Her main departure from mainstream Storm is her attraction to fellow X-Man Beast, an ape-like mutant whom she loves for his intelligence. However, Millar wrote this as a troubled romance, as Beast (written as a character with a deep inferiority complex after a lifetime of ridicule) can not believe anyone could truly love him. When later writer Brian Michael Bendis killed Beast off in April 2004,<ref>Ultimate X-Men #44, April 2004, Marvel Comics, writer Brian Michael Bendis</ref> Bendis let a grief-stricken Storm drastically alter her hairstyle and clothing to distance herself from her time with Beast, alluding to her mohawk hairstyle change in the mainstream version.<ref>Ultimate X-Men #46, June 2004, Marvel Comics, writer Brian Michael Bendis</ref>

Subsequent writer Brian K. Vaughan wrote Storm to become more predisposed to act as the team's conscience, and letting her start a romance with Wolverine. In the Ultimate X-Men: Shock and Awe arc (2005), he inserted new elements into her backstory by establishing Yuriko "Yuri" Oyama as Storm's archenemy. In this version, Yuriko is written as a fellow thief when Storm is still a teenage thief, and their friendship ends in a motorcycle chase which Ororo halts with a sudden rainstorm; Yuri loses control, has a seemingly fatal collision with a truck and is rebuilt into a cyborg by amoral Dr. Cornelius of the mutant superweapon project Weapon X.<ref>Ultimate X-Men: Shock and Awe arc, 2005, Marvel Comics, writer Brian K. Vaughan</ref>

Current writer Robert Kirkman has continued establishing a Storm - Wolverine friendship in Ultimate X-Men: Date Night (2006).

[edit] Miscellaneous versions

  • In the Age of Apocalypse universe (created 1995, various writers), Storm is a member of the X-Men, but more streetwise and tough, and her romantic interest is Quicksilver.<ref name="alternatestorm">uncannyxmen.net. Spotlight on Storm: Alternate Versions. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>
  • In the alternate dystopian Days of Future Past storyline of Chris Claremont (1981), Storm is one of the last fighters of the mutant resistance and gets killed by a horde of robot, mutant-hunting Sentinels.<ref>Uncanny X-Men #141-#142, January - February 1981, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref><ref name="alternatestorm">uncannyxmen.net. Spotlight on Storm: Alternate Versions. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>
  • In Uncanny X-Men #160 (August 1982, writer Chris Claremont)<ref>Uncanny X-Men #160, August 1982, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> and in the Magik (Illyana and Storm) limited series (December 1983 - March 1984, writer Chris Claremont),<ref>Magik #1-#4, December 1983 - March 1984, Marvel Comics, writer Chris Claremont</ref> an alternate Storm is introduced which lives the remaining years of her life in the demonic realm of Limbo. This Storm turns to her heritage of sorcery in old age as her power over the elements waned. She tutors Illyana Rasputin in the use of good magics and battles the demon Belasco over control of Limbo. She is killed by a demonically altered version of Kitty Pryde named Cat.<ref name="alternatestorm">uncannyxmen.net. Spotlight on Storm: Alternate Versions. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>
  • In the alternate universe Earth X series (started 1999 by Jim Krueger), Storm is known as "Queen Storm" and is married to Black Panther, something that happens in the mainstream universe seven years later.<ref>Earth X, started in 1999, Marvel Comics, creators Jim Krueger and Alex Ross</ref><ref name="alternatestorm">uncannyxmen.net. Spotlight on Storm: Alternate Versions. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>
  • In the alternate Mutant X universe (1998 - 2001, written by Howard Mackie), Storm becomes a vampire after being bitten by Dracula, becoming the demonic Bloodstorm.<ref>Mutant X #1-#32, October 1998 - June 2001, Marvel Comics, writer Howard Mackie</ref><ref name="alternatestorm">uncannyxmen.net. Spotlight on Storm: Alternate Versions. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>
  • In the House of M universe by Brian Michael Bendis (2005), Storm is a Kenyan princess.
  • In the alternate universe What If series, written by various writers, Storm has been portrayed as a goddess of Asgard;<ref>What If? (vol. 2) #12, 1990, Marvel Comics</ref> stays a thief and refused to join the X-Men<ref>What If? (vol. 2) #40, August 1992, Marvel Comics, writer Ann Nocenti</ref> a potential X-Men recruit targeted by Mr. Sinister, written as the shady leader of the X-Men;<ref>What If? (vol. 2) #74, June 1995, Marvel Comics, writer Simon Furman</ref> the wielder of the Phoenix force, calling herself Stormphoenix and being the ruthless tyrant of earth, freezing every opposition in the atmosphere;<ref>What If? (vol. 2) #79, 1995, Marvel Comics</ref> marries a fellow X-Man, the feral Wolverine and bears his daugther Kendall Logan, who becomes the hero known as Torrent, having some of her mother's control over weather as well as her father's feral abilities.<ref>What If? (vol. 2) #114, 1998, Marvel Comics</ref> A relationship between Wolverine and Storm was also shown in the X-Men animated series episode "X-Men: The Animated Series: 'One Man's Worth'" (1995).<ref>bcdb.com. X-Men: The Animated Series: "One Man's Worth, Part 1 and 2". Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref><ref name="alternatestorm">uncannyxmen.net. Spotlight on Storm: Alternate Versions. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>
  • In other languages, Storm is known as "Tornade" (French), "Tempesta" (Italian), "Tormenta" (Spanish) or "Tempestade" (Portuguese).

[edit] Appearances in other media

[edit] Film

  • Storm is played by Academy Award-winner Halle Berry in the movies X-Men (2000), X2 (2003) and X-Men: The Last Stand (2006). Despite a high-profile actress like Berry in the role, Storm received little screen time in the first movie and took a backseat to characters such as Wolverine and Jean Grey. In the second film, X2, Storm had more screen time but no real story. Berry rallied for more character development, <ref>comics2film.com. Berry Returns to X-Men for Bigger Role?. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref> and her role was enhanced in X-Men 3. In the third movie, Storm takes over as the director of the Xavier Institute, and as the leader of the X-Men after the death of former director Professor Charles Xavier.

[edit] Television

[edit] Video games

Storm in Marvel vs Capcom 2.
.<ref name="videogames">marvel.com. Video Game Hub Marvel.com Video Game Hub. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

[edit] Other

  • Along with Doctor Doom, the Hulk, the Kingpin and Spider-Man, Storm also has a ride in Marvel Super Hero Island of Universal Studios. The ride (based on a common teacup ride) "Storm Force Acceleration", also includes strobe lights which can be seen if ridden after dark. She is the first superheroine and X-Man to have a ride named after her on Marvel Super Hero Island.<ref name">Universal Orlando. Storm Force Acceleration. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.</ref>

[edit] References

<references/>

[edit] External links

fr:Tornade (X-Men) it:Tempesta (X-Men) nl:Storm (Marvel) pt:Tempestade (Marvel) fi:Storm sv:Storm (seriefigur)

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