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After Wolverine's near-fatal blow during "Fatal Attractions," Magneto used his magnetic abilities to remove the adamantium through Logan's pores, nearly killing Wolverine.
Wolverine has been relegated to supporting character status in X-Men '97, ... It was almost a relief when Wolverine took a break from the X-Men following 1993’s “Fatal Attractions” crossover.
Features X-Men ’97’s Wolverine Twist Sets Up a Controversial New Version of the Character. When X-Men '97's penultimate episode adapted Fatal Attractions, it set up the adventures of feral ...
Wolverine might just have suffered a life-altering blow in X-Men ‘97, ... This is something we’ve seen in the comics, specifically the Fatal Attractions storyline, ...
Fatal Attractions, Feral Wolverine, Asteroid M, and the “Death” of Jean Grey. In another wink at ’90s X-Men comics, “Tolerance is Extinction Part Two” splits the team into two divisions ...
'Fatal Attractions' was kind of created by accident with Peter David admitting that he tossed out the concept of Magneto removing Wolverine's adamantium as a joke. But if there was any time to ...
During the “Fatal Attractions” storyline in 1993’s X-Men #25, Magneto, mutant master of magnetism, nearly killed Wolverine when he ripped the adamantium from his bones on the molecular level ...
The outcome of “Fatal Attractions” saw Wolverine have to get on with life without his Adamantium skeleton – which is the emotional journey Beau DeMayo hints at in this meme.
Both of these events occur in Fatal Attractions, a storyline featured in the 1993 comic X-Men #25. While it may have seemed like Magneto killed Wolverine at the end of episode 9, ...