Krakoa

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Krakoa
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceGiant-Size X-Men #1 (May 1975)
Created byLen Wein
Dave Cockrum
In-story information
SpeciesLiving island
Team affiliationsX-Men
Notable aliasesThe Living Island
The Island That Walks Like a Man
AbilitiesEnergy draining
Lifeform creation
Outer space survival
Telepathic immunity

Krakoa is a fictional living island appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. It first appeared in Giant-Size X-Men #1 and was created by Len Wein and Dave Cockrum. Initially depicted as an antagonist, Krakoa has since grown into a sentient habitat for the mutant nation that shares its name.[1]

Publication history[edit]

On its first appearance in Giant-Size X-Men #1 (1975), Krakoa is introduced as the Pacific island setting where a previous team of X-Men have gone missing while investigating strong readings from Cerebro, a device with the ability to detect mutants. Its name recalls that of Krakatoa, a volcanic island in Indonesia which erupted in 1883. Prof. Charles Xavier recruits a new, international team to rescue them. On their arrival on Krakoa, they are attacked by the flora, fauna, and very ground of the island, until finally Angel—one of the original X-Men they are rescuing—warns them that "the island itself" is the powerful mutant which Cerebro had detected. That is, the entire island of Krakoa had become a single monstrous mutant, similar to the Aspidochelone of legend. (Godzilla and Monster Island are also likely influences, since nuclear testing is blamed for Krakoa's creation.) It needs the mutants in order to leech their life-energy. Both teams escape as Krakoa is ripped from the ocean bed, hurled into space, and apparently dies. While the issue would be celebrated for revitalizing the X-Men, the character / setting of Krakoa was revived only very sporadically until Jonathan Hickman's 2019 X-Men event House of X and Powers of X. In those miniseries (which established the premise of the X-Men comics going forward), the mutants have established communication with Krakoa and agreed to live on it in a symbiotic relationship, establishing the island as an independent mutant nation-state. The true aims of Krakoa have so far been left ambiguous.

Fictional character biography[edit]

Krakoa was originally depicted as a very small island in the Pacific Ocean that was located close to where some nuclear bombing tests were done. The radiation somehow mutated the island's ecosystem into a hive-mind entity.[2] Sergeant Fury and his commando team were accidental witnesses to the bomb drop which created Krakoa in early 1945, and soon afterwards crashed on and encountered the island's collective intelligence, with whom they arranged a peaceful parting in exchange for keeping its existence a secret.[3][4]

However, Krakoa later became hungry for the unique life energy created by mutants. It was responsible for the deaths of a team of young mutants, composed of Petra, Sway, Darwin and Kid Vulcan (the latter two were able to survive, but became trapped inside Krakoa), from a parallel X-Men team led by Moira McTaggart.[5] It was later able to capture the original X-Men (then consisting of Cyclops, Angel, Havok, Iceman, Jean Grey and Polaris), which led to the subsequent formation of the new team of X-Men (namely Colossus, Nightcrawler, Storm, Sunfire, Thunderbird, Banshee and Wolverine). The new X-Men team found the original X-Men and by using her powers, Polaris was able to launch Krakoa into outer space.[2]

Krakoa was later apparently found and captured for study by the cosmic entity known as The Stranger, as seen when Quasar visited one of his 'laboratory worlds'.[6] Krakoa was eventually freed along with many other specimens[7] and was last seen orbiting around Earth until the energy wave from M-Day and the Collective awakened Vulcan.[8] It is also revealed that before it was shot into outer space, Krakoa released several spores from itself, which later plagued the X-Men.[9]

X of Swords[edit]

After creating the External Gate to reach the dimension where Arakko is located, Apocalypse sent Summoner with Banshee and Unus the Untouchable to herald his arrival. When Summoner reemerged with a wounded and dying Banshee, he pleaded for help and the issue of the External Gate was brought before the Quiet Council. Although the majority of the Quiet Council voted to destroy the External Gate due to its security risk, they were overruled by Krakoa who demanded that the Gate remain open.

After the Krakoan mutants defeated the Swordbearers of Arakko, Krakoa was final able to reunite with Arakko. However, as it turns out, they have no interest in unification because they have evolved from what they originally were, with their personalities becoming radically different over the incredibly long period of time that they have been apart, even needing Doug to translate for both of them.[10]

Inferno[edit]

It was eventually discovered that the true motive for the creation of Krakoa as a nation was not to preserve mutantkind, but instead, was to eliminate it, since Moira had lost faith in the mutant dream after too many failed lives, and because her powers gave her an immense ability to inflict her will on mutant history, she hatched a plan to spend her final life avoiding Destiny and slowly boxing mutants in until she could use the mutant cure she had created in one of her past lives which works before mutant powers even manifest. However Moira's plan backfired when Doug Ramsey and his allies (the technological being Warlock, the Arakkoan warrior Bei the Blood Moon and the island of Krakoa itself) made a surprise appearance at No-Place, revealing that he had always been aware of Moira's presence, and knows she was conspiring with Professor X and Magneto. Moira's role in the founding of their country was eventually revealed, thanks to Emma Frost, to the entire ruling council of Krakoa, and they've all been sworn to secrecy about it.[11]

The spawns of Krakoa[edit]

There have been several spawns of Krakoa:

Vega Superior[edit]

The first known spore was Vega Superior, who took control of an island, later christened Wagner's isle, whose inhabitants began to worship him. When Nightcrawler crashed his plane there, he found Vega-Superior in the caves under the island, who had inherited his father's memories of the X-Men's genetic code, including that of Nightcrawler. He tries to choke Nightcrawler, but the latter manages to escape. He makes versions of the X-Men which Vega-Superior dubs the Vega-Men, out of natural materials, such as a Colossus made of stone, a Wolverine of ice, an Angel made of leaves and vines, a Nightcrawler made of mud and a Cyclops that shoots lava. However, they are much weaker than the original X-Men, and Nightcrawler easily defeats them all. Vega-Superior then chases him into the ocean before realizing he cannot swim.[9]

Krakoa II[edit]

Another spore of Krakoa took control of a construction site on a tropical island, and was discovered and defeated by the Young X-Men when they were investigating the disappearance of 56 construction workers.[12]

Krakoa/Brood Hybrid[edit]

Another spawn of Krakoa would be fabricated by the anti-mutant tech genius Kaga, creating his own hybrid out of Brood DNA to attack the X-Men at a later date. Eventually, the creature was cut down in the dawn of its conception by Cyclops in one shot.[13]

Krakoa III/X-Men's Krakoa[edit]

Later when Wolverine and some of the X-Men splintered away from Cyclops' group, it is discovered that Beast has built the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning on top of a "male" spawn of Krakoa.[14] After Quentin Quire manages to reason with him, the Krakoa spawn contacts Rachel Summers who ends up translating for him when Rachel tells Wolverine that the Hellfire Club made Krakoa attack them and that he is a mutant like the X-Men. Rachel discovered that this Krakoa was grown by Hellfire Club member Maximillian von Katzenelnbogen (a descendant of Victor Frankenstein) in his artificial supergarden. When Rachel mentions that Krakoa keeps apologizing and wants to join the X-Men, Wolverine ends up letting Krakoa stay as a part of the school.[15] Not soon after the school began having money difficulties, it is Krakoa who solves the school's financial problems by growing great quantities of giant diamonds on the trees he produces.[16] Krakoa's school grounds, the Bamfs, and Doop were able to prevent Swarm from invading the Jean Grey School.[17] After the Terrigen Mists were released into the Earth's atmosphere and began causing the M-Pox plague which was deadly to mutants worldwide, the X-Mansion was moved to the dimension of Limbo where it acted as X-Haven. Krakoa was not part of the displacement and moved his bio-matter offshore to function as an independent island in the Pacific Ocean.[18] After Kid Omega, whom was his only companion for a time, returned to the Xavier School on Thor's suggestion. Krakoa came back to New York searching for him as the son of the living island missed his friend.[19]

Mister Sinister's Krakoa[edit]

During the "Avengers vs. X-Men" storyline, Mister Sinister had also obtained a few Krakoa Spores. Like Maximillian von Frankenstein, He was able to mass-produce the Krakoa consciousness. Mister Sinister even turned one into a mobile castle in his underground city. It was later burned down by the Phoenix Five.[20]

Hellfire Club's Krakoa[edit]

Soon afterward, it was revealed that Maximillian von Frankenstein had been able to mass-produce Krakoa's consciousness and created several volcanic Krakoas to act in defense of the Hellfire Academy.[21] They were all killed in battle against the X-Men.[22]

Quiet Council of Krakoa[edit]

Quiet Council of Krakoa is a fictional council of mutant superheroes and supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.[23] It was the twelve-member governing body divided up into four sections of three seats along with an adjunct section.[24]

Reception[edit]

  • In 2020, CBR.com ranked Krakoa 3rd in their "10 Most Powerful Fictional Nations In the Marvel Universe" list.[25]
  • In 2021, Screen Rant included Krakoa in their "10 Most Important Fictional Marvel Comics Countries" list.[26]

Other versions[edit]

In the Ultimate Marvel reality, Krakoa is featured in issues of Ultimate X-Men. Krakoa Island is south of Genosha (which in this reality is vastly anti-mutant under the reign of Lord Scheele) and the filming location for Mojo Adams' reality TV shows for executing mutants, such as Scheele's killer Arthur Centino aka Longshot.[27]

In What If?: Deadly Genesis, Vulcan's trip to Krakoa saw him kill the rest of the X-Men by accident before the island itself was jettisoned into deep space. Years later, it is discovered by the Silver Surfer, and analysis of the cavern with Sway's powers reveals what really happened to the original team.

References[edit]

  1. ^ House of X #1 (July 2019). Marvel Comics.
  2. ^ a b Giant-Size X-Men #1 (1975). Marvel Comics.
  3. ^ Journey into Mystery: The Birth of Krakoa (2018). Marvel Comics.
  4. ^ George Marston: JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY Returns Original NICK FURY Investigating Deep X-MEN Lore. Newsarama, June 19, 2018.
  5. ^ X-Men: Deadly Genesis (2005/2006). Marvel Comics.
  6. ^ Quasar #15. Marvel Comics.
  7. ^ Quasar #16. Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ X-Men: Deadly Genesis #1-6. Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ a b Excalibur #31. Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ X-Men (vol. 5) #16. Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Inferno #4. Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Young X-Men #7. Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ Astonishing X-Men (vol. 3) #33. Marvel Comics.
  14. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men #2. Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men #3. Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men #7. Marvel Comics.
  17. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men #18. Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ The Mighty Thor (vol. 3) #18. Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ Generation X (vol. 2) #8. Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ The Uncanny X-Men (vol. 2) #14. Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men #33. Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ Wolverine and the X-Men #34. Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ "Marvel Comics March 2022 comics revealed". GamesRadar+. December 23, 2021. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  24. ^ Puc, Samantha (September 25, 2019). "This page in POWERS OF X #5 might reveal major spoilers for the upcoming DAWN OF X". Comics Beat. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  25. ^ Brueheim, Jackson (2020-05-17). "The 10 Most Powerful Fictional Nations In the Marvel Universe, Ranked". CBR. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
  26. ^ Harn, Darby (2021-04-08). "10 Most Important Fictional Marvel Comics Countries, Including Madripoor". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
  27. ^ Ultimate X-Men #54-55. Marvel Comics.

External links[edit]