Yeah, Cyber (And Omega Red.) SHOULD be classic Wolverine villains, but for some reason they’re just not! Omega Red was more of a villain in the 90’s cartoon than he was in the comic.
@@zeldahyrule543 yes I understand that but wolverine is still a beast in his own right and with the Muramasa Blade you can cut through almost anything in the marvel universe including his own skeleton and Cyber.
Cyber was quite the brute in his day! I remember his numerous illustrations from the Fleer Clan cards...stating with Adamantium Arms and venom laced claws, this guy was understandably dangerous...not to mention he broke Wolverines bone claws!
Did *NOT* know Cyber was brought back! I remember when Genesis had him killed to secure some adamantium, but I haven't followed comics in quite some time
Cyber is one of the many adversaries of Wolverine covered in an amazing book called "the Wolverine files", which contains alot of the art seen in this video.😁
In the first appearances, in marvel comics presents, wolverine does remember cyber from his past, but his memory was of what happened broken, even remembering cyber as the bully in a high-school in like a weird 1950s setting. Like theres a origin story but its appreciated after the flashback, wolverine was reacting to hallucinogens during the retelling of the memory, and wolverine realizes immediately its a false memory. Ultimately the fight is confusing and while you dont know the reason that they are enemies and neither do they, they both fear nothing in the world except each other.
No offense they both have adamantium wtf is Kevlar gonna do to help wolverine against cyber who also has adamantium claws I love when writers forget characters powers.
Kevlar is like a thick kind of hide that distributes and reduces the impact of blades. It’s not meant to outright stop attacks like steel, but rather to absorb the force behind them; thus the material the blades are made of wouldn’t matter. Kevlar would make any slashes or stabs shallower.
This is why i hardly read Marvel comic books in the 1990s. I read John Constantine Hellblazer, The Flash, Nightwing, The Punisher, Nightwing, Black Panther, Hellboy, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, Robin, Spawn, Savage Dragon, & Deadpool in the 1990s. The Onnly consistent Marvel comic books of the 1990s were The Black Panther by Christopher Priest, Deadpool by Joe Kelly, & The Punisher by Chuck Dixon. DC kicked ass in the 1990s with The Flash by Mark Waid, Aquaman by Peter David, Nightwing by Chuck Dixon, Robin by Chuck Dixon, Wonder Woman by John Bryne & John Constantine Hellblazer by Jamie Delano, Garth Ennis, Paul Jenkins. I also loved independent comic books like Spawn by Todd MacFarlane, Savage Dragon by Erik Larsen, & Hellboy by Mike Mignola.
yo, was cyber first drawn bt the maxes same keith? that would mean it's true that cyber was to wolverine as bane is to batman became bane was to batman was venom was to spiderman and the MaXX is also Venom inspired, the late 80s, early 90s were extreme
I am not any remotely close to being a comic book guy but it is amazing that at 25seconds into the video, I instantly recognize Rob Liefeld's absentee feet and grotesque anatomic choices artwork
Cyber to me seems like quite a lot of plot armor and writer wank, I don't even remotely see that some drill sergeant could kill wolverine with all of his increased senses, speed and strength
Sabertooth and Cyber would make a good mash-up character- Cybertooth Omega Red and Doc Ock put together would make for a cybernetic tentacle nightmare- Omega Octopus
A time in Wolverine book(s) history when they kept creating shiddy adversaries to try and make a counter to him. They all failed. Only Sabertooth is a proper foil to Wolverine. The 90s were like Marvel literally hired high school kids to write for them. The stories were pure shit as they pushed the art over storytelling lol.