Timebroker: Difference between revisions
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In #53, the Exiles received a warning: "Beware the Timebreaker. He is not what he seems." Almost immediately after, the Timebroker acted irrationally, giving orders to murder the [[Age of Apocalypse]] X-Men as well as the Exiles' [[Mimic (Exiles)|Mimic]]. He also did not pop in when [[Sasquatch (comics)|Tanaraq]] and [[Holocaust (Marvel Comics)|Holocaust]] attempted to rebel and get their old lives back. The Exiles learned later the true nature of the Timebroker during a raid on Panoptichron, namely that "he" is an illusion created by bug-men.{{issue|date=December 2012}} |
In #53, the Exiles received a warning: "Beware the Timebreaker. He is not what he seems." Almost immediately after, the Timebroker acted irrationally, giving orders to murder the [[Age of Apocalypse]] X-Men as well as the Exiles' [[Mimic (Exiles)|Mimic]]. He also did not pop in when [[Sasquatch (comics)|Tanaraq]] and [[Holocaust (Marvel Comics)|Holocaust]] attempted to rebel and get their old lives back. The Exiles learned later the true nature of the Timebroker during a raid on Panoptichron, namely that "he" is an illusion created by bug-men.{{issue|date=December 2012}} |
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Later, Mimic used him to convince Blink and the others to cast the infiltrating [[Hyperion (comics)#Other versions|Hyperion]] back to his original Earth during a raid on Panoptichron. [[Heather Hudson (Exiles)|Heather Hudson]] used the Tallus in #78 to tell the Exiles and [[Squadron Supreme]] about each other to save the Exiles from life in prison. The Timebroker then proceeded to fire the Exiles (albeit temporarily) in #84. He then appeared, controlled by Blink, in "Exiles: Days of Then and Now" when new Exiles needed to be recruited to save a world where the [[ |
Later, Mimic used him to convince Blink and the others to cast the infiltrating [[Hyperion (comics)#Other versions|Hyperion]] back to his original Earth during a raid on Panoptichron. [[Heather Hudson (Exiles)|Heather Hudson]] used the Tallus in #78 to tell the Exiles and [[Squadron Supreme]] about each other to save the Exiles from life in prison. The Timebroker then proceeded to fire the Exiles (albeit temporarily) in #84. He then appeared, controlled by Blink, in "Exiles: Days of Then and Now" when new Exiles needed to be recruited to save a world where the [[Hulk]] hijacked the [[Annihilation (comics)|Annihilation Wave]]. The Timebroker has not appeared since, and oddly enough, the final team of Exiles, led by Blink and coordinated by Morph, [[Nocturne (Talia Wagner)|Nocturne]], and [[Heather Hudson (Exiles)|Heather]], treat the Timebroker as the Timebreakers' predecessor instead of interface.{{issue|date=December 2012}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 17:23, 15 February 2019
It has been suggested that this article be merged with Timebreakers. (Discuss) Proposed since February 2019. |
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2009) |
The Timebroker | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Exiles #1 (August 2001) |
Created by | Judd Winick Mike McKone |
The Timebroker is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by Judd Winick for the comic book Exiles; a psychic construct created by the Timebreakers, a race of alien bug-people who accidentally damaged a large number of alternate universes.
Fictional character biography
The Timebroker first appeared in Exiles #1, when he invited the Age of Apocalypse version of Blink to join a group of dimension-lost superheroes whom he named "The Exiles", whose mission would be to repair the damaged realities, and hopefully, to return home safely. A team member whose home reality is repaired is immediately sent home, and replaced with someone new.[volume & issue needed]
To repair each damaged reality, the Exiles must complete a mission given to them by the Timebroker through a communications device called, "The Tallus," worn by the leader of the group, be it Blink, Mimic, or Sabretooth. These missions are usually humanitarian or super-heroic in nature, but sometimes involve assassination.[volume & issue needed]
The Timebroker also created a separate team of lost heroes, called Weapon X, whose job is mainly wetwork. When they grew out of control, the Timebroker ordered the Exiles and Weapon X to battle each other until only 6 remained alive.[volume & issue needed]
In #53, the Exiles received a warning: "Beware the Timebreaker. He is not what he seems." Almost immediately after, the Timebroker acted irrationally, giving orders to murder the Age of Apocalypse X-Men as well as the Exiles' Mimic. He also did not pop in when Tanaraq and Holocaust attempted to rebel and get their old lives back. The Exiles learned later the true nature of the Timebroker during a raid on Panoptichron, namely that "he" is an illusion created by bug-men.[volume & issue needed]
Later, Mimic used him to convince Blink and the others to cast the infiltrating Hyperion back to his original Earth during a raid on Panoptichron. Heather Hudson used the Tallus in #78 to tell the Exiles and Squadron Supreme about each other to save the Exiles from life in prison. The Timebroker then proceeded to fire the Exiles (albeit temporarily) in #84. He then appeared, controlled by Blink, in "Exiles: Days of Then and Now" when new Exiles needed to be recruited to save a world where the Hulk hijacked the Annihilation Wave. The Timebroker has not appeared since, and oddly enough, the final team of Exiles, led by Blink and coordinated by Morph, Nocturne, and Heather, treat the Timebroker as the Timebreakers' predecessor instead of interface.[volume & issue needed]
References
External links
- Timebroker at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)