Which Cable Comics Issue Started Cable'S Origin?

2025-08-28 19:52:08 96

4 Answers

Una
Una
2025-09-02 11:12:26
Honestly, if you want the single issue that kicked Cable into the spotlight, it's 'The New Mutants' #87 (1990). That’s the first time we meet Cable as the grizzled, gun-toting time-traveler who immediately stole the show. I still picture that Liefeld-era cover—the bulky shoulder pads, the cybernetic arm—and how different he felt from the rest of the X-verse when I first flipped the page.

That said, his true origin is threaded through earlier X-books. The whole Nathan Summers backstory — son of Cyclops and Madelyne Pryor, infected with the techno-organic virus and ultimately sent into the future — gets revealed across mid-'80s 'Uncanny X-Men' and 'X-Factor' plotlines and then expanded in the years after Cable’s debut. So if you want the debut issue: go to 'The New Mutants' #87, but if you want the origin in full, you'll be bouncing around a few older issues and later Cable/X-Force runs that flesh him out more.
Kian
Kian
2025-09-02 16:27:26
Short and chatty: the comic that started Cable’s on-page life is 'The New Mutants' #87. That’s where he first appears as the battle-hardened time-traveler everyone talks about. His backstory—being Nathan Summers, son of Cyclops and Madelyne Pryor, contracting the techno-organic virus and being sent to the future—gets revealed across earlier 'Uncanny X-Men' and 'X-Factor' material and then in his own titles later on. If you want the classic introduction, grab 'The New Mutants' #87, then follow up with the older X-books and the early '90s Cable/X-Force runs to see how the origin unfolds.
Nicholas
Nicholas
2025-09-03 09:46:44
I nerd out over continuity, so here's a slightly deeper take. In terms of publication history, Cable as we know him was introduced in 'The New Mutants' #87 (1990), created by Louise Simonson and Rob Liefeld. That comic dropped him into the Marvel Universe fully formed—political soldier, scarred, with that iconic techno-arm—and it raised tons of questions readers wanted answered.

Those answers were pieced together from earlier and later issues. The baby Nathan Summers and his connection to Cyclops and Madelyne Pryor are rooted in mid-'80s X-storylines in 'Uncanny X-Men' and 'X-Factor'. Then subsequent Cable, X-Force, and crossover stories explained the techno-organic infection, his being taken to the future, and his upbringing among the Askani. If you’re tracing the origin like a detective, read the mid-'80s X-books first for the family drama, then 'The New Mutants' #87 for the debut, and finally Cable/X-Force runs for the full mythology and its retcons. It’s a fun treasure hunt for continuity fans.
Quincy
Quincy
2025-09-03 16:41:42
I’ll keep this quick and chatty: Cable first shows up as an adult in 'The New Mutants' #87. That single comic is what introduced the character readers would recognize—gritty, cybernetic, and mysterious. From there, writers peeled back layers of his origin over several stories. The backstory—Nathan Summers being the child of Cyclops and Madelyne Pryor, the techno-organic virus, and the future-warping rescue—was revealed across earlier 'Uncanny X-Men' and 'X-Factor' arcs and later Cable and X-Force issues.

So the short, practical takeaway: issuewise, start at 'The New Mutants' #87 for his first appearance, and then follow up with the older X-books and Cable's own series to see how that origin was built and retconned over time.
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