here the game mechanics do what they need to to progress the story and that's it. LitRPGs not set in an actual game have a hard time organically justifying the game mechanics (and audiobooks especially have problem conveying stat sheets you'd just skim when reading a book). when you get into the actual adventure part of the story, you find it very light on the 'gaming' aspect of year magic system. it's a little unrealistic that MONTHS of torture didn't leave him a jibbering mess, but I'm fine with 'a wizard did it' considering the setting and story. skip forward a few months and he's beaten, half broken and eager to make a run for it. he's naive at first, but obviously gets that stripped away quickly. until the 1/4 mark it might as well be a clone, yet I listened to the whole thing and the others out at time of writing. might as well get it out the way first: yes the book starts out VERY similarly to the rising of the shield hero. A group within Orchis have been tasked with killing him, however fans also know that if they fail, the task will pass to the mysterious 'Cleaner.' As a founding member of the X-Men and their most powerful living hero, Iceman has returned from the dead to take on Orchis, pushing himself to a new, god-tier level to do it.Tl dr- starts off as a clone but when it steps into its own it takes the best parts of the original along with it. Following the death of fellow Omega Jean Grey, Iceman is the group's primary target, especially after he managed to damage Nimrod at the Hellfire Gala. Iceman will need his new powers to stand a chance against Orchis, who have unleashed the Elements of Doom on his hometown. If fans thought that Bobby's Omega-level powers stopped at terraforming Mars, his new army shows there's still a lot of growth to come. With the majority of mutants either dead or in hiding, each individual hero matters more than ever before, and Iceman has gotten that message, finally embracing his potential. In the former, these bodies have their own independent (though basic) thought patterns, whereas in Age of Apocalypse, Bobby's mind is shared out between each. In both the X-Men future depicted in Battle of the Atom and the alternate reality of Age of Apocalypse, Iceman uses multiple bodies. Now, that experimentation takes on huge new importance.įans knew this was the ultimate form of Iceman's powers, but one he's been reluctant to develop in its mainstream timeline. However, being freed from the constraints of a single form has prompted Iceman to experiment, and the founding X-Men hero has been using a snow golem named 'Clyde' to test his ability to stretch his consciousness, manifested from his original X-Men costume. The result is a version of Iceman with no human body, and who has hard limits on how much he can use his powers before he falls to pieces. Thankfully, Bobby's ex-boyfriend Romeo was on hand, and used his empathetic powers to erect a gigantic ice castle, from which he's able to help Bobby broadcast his consciousness into the world. The killing stroke melted Iceman in front of his friends, and left him unable to re-form. Nimrod injected Bobby's ice body with a napalm-like substance, likely derived from magic. Related: Cyclops' Iconic Alex Ross Costume Returns in Fanart of Forgotten DesignĪt the brutal Mutant Massacre carried out by Orchis during Krakoa's Hellfire Gala, Iceman was killed by the ruthless Sentinel robot Nimrod.
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