Why are only X-Men called mutants?












17















In X-Men, Wolverine, Magneto, Mystique, Beast, etc. are all mutants. Mutants are perhaps the people in the form of humans who have extraordinary powers. So, in that terms, why aren't Iron Man, Captain America, Ant-Man, or in DC Comics, Superman, Batman, Flash considered to be mutants? Is the term mutant reserved only for X-Men?










share|improve this question




















  • 5





    In DC they are called metahumans, in Marvel they are called mutants. Also, in the Marvel universe, more than just the X-men are referred to as mutants, such as the Morlocks.

    – Phyneas
    Aug 30 '15 at 4:42






  • 2





    @Phyneas On the other hand, Marvel also uses "mutates" as distinct from "mutants"

    – Izkata
    Aug 30 '15 at 6:04






  • 2





    related info:How do regular people in the Marvel universe distinguish between mutants and mutates?

    – phantom42
    Aug 30 '15 at 13:41






  • 4





    Also, I don't understand why you included Batman in your list. Not only is he not a mutant, the only things that make him special are being rich, smart, and good at punching people in the face.

    – Wad Cheber
    Aug 30 '15 at 22:29






  • 3





    @Phyneas: I’m saying that in the DC universe, metahumans refers to superhumans; whilst in the Marvel universe, mutants refers to humans with the X-gene, which is a subset of superhumans in that universe. So the terms don’t have equivalent meaning.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Aug 30 '15 at 23:07


















17















In X-Men, Wolverine, Magneto, Mystique, Beast, etc. are all mutants. Mutants are perhaps the people in the form of humans who have extraordinary powers. So, in that terms, why aren't Iron Man, Captain America, Ant-Man, or in DC Comics, Superman, Batman, Flash considered to be mutants? Is the term mutant reserved only for X-Men?










share|improve this question




















  • 5





    In DC they are called metahumans, in Marvel they are called mutants. Also, in the Marvel universe, more than just the X-men are referred to as mutants, such as the Morlocks.

    – Phyneas
    Aug 30 '15 at 4:42






  • 2





    @Phyneas On the other hand, Marvel also uses "mutates" as distinct from "mutants"

    – Izkata
    Aug 30 '15 at 6:04






  • 2





    related info:How do regular people in the Marvel universe distinguish between mutants and mutates?

    – phantom42
    Aug 30 '15 at 13:41






  • 4





    Also, I don't understand why you included Batman in your list. Not only is he not a mutant, the only things that make him special are being rich, smart, and good at punching people in the face.

    – Wad Cheber
    Aug 30 '15 at 22:29






  • 3





    @Phyneas: I’m saying that in the DC universe, metahumans refers to superhumans; whilst in the Marvel universe, mutants refers to humans with the X-gene, which is a subset of superhumans in that universe. So the terms don’t have equivalent meaning.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Aug 30 '15 at 23:07
















17












17








17


1






In X-Men, Wolverine, Magneto, Mystique, Beast, etc. are all mutants. Mutants are perhaps the people in the form of humans who have extraordinary powers. So, in that terms, why aren't Iron Man, Captain America, Ant-Man, or in DC Comics, Superman, Batman, Flash considered to be mutants? Is the term mutant reserved only for X-Men?










share|improve this question
















In X-Men, Wolverine, Magneto, Mystique, Beast, etc. are all mutants. Mutants are perhaps the people in the form of humans who have extraordinary powers. So, in that terms, why aren't Iron Man, Captain America, Ant-Man, or in DC Comics, Superman, Batman, Flash considered to be mutants? Is the term mutant reserved only for X-Men?







marvel dc terminology mutant






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 28 '18 at 3:52









Stormblessed

679120




679120










asked Aug 30 '15 at 4:27









AneekAneek

4641613




4641613








  • 5





    In DC they are called metahumans, in Marvel they are called mutants. Also, in the Marvel universe, more than just the X-men are referred to as mutants, such as the Morlocks.

    – Phyneas
    Aug 30 '15 at 4:42






  • 2





    @Phyneas On the other hand, Marvel also uses "mutates" as distinct from "mutants"

    – Izkata
    Aug 30 '15 at 6:04






  • 2





    related info:How do regular people in the Marvel universe distinguish between mutants and mutates?

    – phantom42
    Aug 30 '15 at 13:41






  • 4





    Also, I don't understand why you included Batman in your list. Not only is he not a mutant, the only things that make him special are being rich, smart, and good at punching people in the face.

    – Wad Cheber
    Aug 30 '15 at 22:29






  • 3





    @Phyneas: I’m saying that in the DC universe, metahumans refers to superhumans; whilst in the Marvel universe, mutants refers to humans with the X-gene, which is a subset of superhumans in that universe. So the terms don’t have equivalent meaning.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Aug 30 '15 at 23:07
















  • 5





    In DC they are called metahumans, in Marvel they are called mutants. Also, in the Marvel universe, more than just the X-men are referred to as mutants, such as the Morlocks.

    – Phyneas
    Aug 30 '15 at 4:42






  • 2





    @Phyneas On the other hand, Marvel also uses "mutates" as distinct from "mutants"

    – Izkata
    Aug 30 '15 at 6:04






  • 2





    related info:How do regular people in the Marvel universe distinguish between mutants and mutates?

    – phantom42
    Aug 30 '15 at 13:41






  • 4





    Also, I don't understand why you included Batman in your list. Not only is he not a mutant, the only things that make him special are being rich, smart, and good at punching people in the face.

    – Wad Cheber
    Aug 30 '15 at 22:29






  • 3





    @Phyneas: I’m saying that in the DC universe, metahumans refers to superhumans; whilst in the Marvel universe, mutants refers to humans with the X-gene, which is a subset of superhumans in that universe. So the terms don’t have equivalent meaning.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Aug 30 '15 at 23:07










5




5





In DC they are called metahumans, in Marvel they are called mutants. Also, in the Marvel universe, more than just the X-men are referred to as mutants, such as the Morlocks.

– Phyneas
Aug 30 '15 at 4:42





In DC they are called metahumans, in Marvel they are called mutants. Also, in the Marvel universe, more than just the X-men are referred to as mutants, such as the Morlocks.

– Phyneas
Aug 30 '15 at 4:42




2




2





@Phyneas On the other hand, Marvel also uses "mutates" as distinct from "mutants"

– Izkata
Aug 30 '15 at 6:04





@Phyneas On the other hand, Marvel also uses "mutates" as distinct from "mutants"

– Izkata
Aug 30 '15 at 6:04




2




2





related info:How do regular people in the Marvel universe distinguish between mutants and mutates?

– phantom42
Aug 30 '15 at 13:41





related info:How do regular people in the Marvel universe distinguish between mutants and mutates?

– phantom42
Aug 30 '15 at 13:41




4




4





Also, I don't understand why you included Batman in your list. Not only is he not a mutant, the only things that make him special are being rich, smart, and good at punching people in the face.

– Wad Cheber
Aug 30 '15 at 22:29





Also, I don't understand why you included Batman in your list. Not only is he not a mutant, the only things that make him special are being rich, smart, and good at punching people in the face.

– Wad Cheber
Aug 30 '15 at 22:29




3




3





@Phyneas: I’m saying that in the DC universe, metahumans refers to superhumans; whilst in the Marvel universe, mutants refers to humans with the X-gene, which is a subset of superhumans in that universe. So the terms don’t have equivalent meaning.

– Paul D. Waite
Aug 30 '15 at 23:07







@Phyneas: I’m saying that in the DC universe, metahumans refers to superhumans; whilst in the Marvel universe, mutants refers to humans with the X-gene, which is a subset of superhumans in that universe. So the terms don’t have equivalent meaning.

– Paul D. Waite
Aug 30 '15 at 23:07












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















46














Iron Man (in the MCU, at least) is just a genetically normal person with lots of money and technology. Sure, he had an arc reactor in his chest for a while, but he's no mutant. A mutant as seen in the X-Men would be born genetically different from a normal human.



As noted in the above answer, Captain America was a normal person before being subjected to the process which turned him into a superhero. It is often the case with Marvel heroes such as the Hulk or Spider-Man that they were normal before being given superpowers by some kind of scientific experiment or accident.



Ant-Man's power is in his suit. He's a normal person.



Superman is a Kryptonian (an alien.) He's not a mutant either; he's normal for a Kryptonian, it's just that being in the proximity of a yellow sun gives Kryptonians superpowers or that they get them when they mature (original origin story says the latter.)



Batman is another normal person with money and gadgets. He has no superpowers. He's the DC equivalent of Iron Man in that respect. Not a mutant.



The Flash typically gained his powers through a chemical accident, and was thus not a mutant.






share|improve this answer





















  • 3





    This just lists the specific cases of particular non-mutants and doesn't answer the question in general.

    – mattdm
    Aug 31 '15 at 16:25






  • 1





    Appears to answer the question as written.

    – fectin
    Jan 28 '17 at 18:06



















33














Within Marvel, the term of "mutants" specifically refers to recipients of the "X-gene", homo superior. It is a specific genetic mutation with a wide variety of effects, occasionally indicated to be the "next stage" of human development. As Phyneas indicated, it's not just the X-men — the Morlocks, the Brotherhood of Mutants, and other X-gene carriers are included and there are non-mutant V-men.



Within the Ultimate Marvel Universe, "mutants" are the result of the Super-Soldier/Weapon X project, but they are similarly considered to be something different from people who are born with certain physical differences, such as Iron Man (he was born with neural tissue throughout his body), by treatments like Captain America (empowered by the Super-Soldier serum), or by technological means like Ant Man (gains his powers through the technical discovery of Pym Particles, although his wife, Wasp, is later revealed to be a mutant despite similar powers).






share|improve this answer


























  • Personally I think that this is the better answer as it defines the term "mutants" in both the main and Ultimate universe.

    – Thunderforge
    Aug 31 '15 at 15:13











  • Eh, I'm not worried about it. :)

    – FuzzyBoots
    Aug 31 '15 at 15:20



















3














The existing answers cover Marvel well, but don't mention DC.



DC does have characters who would be considered mutants - people who have natural powers due to their genes, as opposed to people who gained powers through some sort of accident. The one that stands out in my mind is Jericho (of New Teen Titans fame). Danny Chase (also a Titan, from The New Titans), who had telekinetic abilities, also seemed to have them due to genetic factors, rather than some accident.



In 1988 and 1989, DC published a three-part mini-series, Invasion!, where a number of alien races tried to invade and conquer Earth. In the course of this series, we discovered that most (possibly all) of the humans who had acquired super-powers due to accidents have what is called a meta-gene. This appears to be very similar to the "x-gene" mentioned in Marvel's comics; in fact, Marvel has had mutants whose x-gene lay dormant, so they didn't gain powers normally (Lorna Dane, a.k.a. Polaris, is one of these).



During the Invasion storyline, some characters gained powers



DC's populace of people with the meta-gene seems to remain dormant far more often than Marvel's mutant population. Most "metahumans" gain their powers in association with some sort of accident, rather than having them simply appear due to the stress of puberty (the normal process for a Marvel mutant).



DC may not prominently refer to any of their characters who do seem to have powers not related to an accident as mutants because:




  • The term "mutant" is so strongly associated with Marvel; or

  • Because Marvel has the term trademarked (well, 'The New Mutants" is trademarked at least, and re-used often enough to maintain the trademark, I believe).


After all, the guy who says "Shazam!" was published under titles involving his magic word instead of his name (Captain Marvel) for several decades because Marvel had a trademark on "Captain Marvel"; to the point where DC changed his name to "Shazam", at least for a while.



I don't think I've seen the "meta-gene" explicitly referred to in more than 10 years. In the post-Flashpoint world, it's unclear if all powered humans (whether due to an accident, or to "natural causes") have the meta-gene as a common explanation or not.



(OK, I've now seen it in Deathstroke. However, it's possible the writer (Christopher Priest) included it based on his historical knowledge of the DCU, and the editor simply left it in place.)






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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes









    46














    Iron Man (in the MCU, at least) is just a genetically normal person with lots of money and technology. Sure, he had an arc reactor in his chest for a while, but he's no mutant. A mutant as seen in the X-Men would be born genetically different from a normal human.



    As noted in the above answer, Captain America was a normal person before being subjected to the process which turned him into a superhero. It is often the case with Marvel heroes such as the Hulk or Spider-Man that they were normal before being given superpowers by some kind of scientific experiment or accident.



    Ant-Man's power is in his suit. He's a normal person.



    Superman is a Kryptonian (an alien.) He's not a mutant either; he's normal for a Kryptonian, it's just that being in the proximity of a yellow sun gives Kryptonians superpowers or that they get them when they mature (original origin story says the latter.)



    Batman is another normal person with money and gadgets. He has no superpowers. He's the DC equivalent of Iron Man in that respect. Not a mutant.



    The Flash typically gained his powers through a chemical accident, and was thus not a mutant.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 3





      This just lists the specific cases of particular non-mutants and doesn't answer the question in general.

      – mattdm
      Aug 31 '15 at 16:25






    • 1





      Appears to answer the question as written.

      – fectin
      Jan 28 '17 at 18:06
















    46














    Iron Man (in the MCU, at least) is just a genetically normal person with lots of money and technology. Sure, he had an arc reactor in his chest for a while, but he's no mutant. A mutant as seen in the X-Men would be born genetically different from a normal human.



    As noted in the above answer, Captain America was a normal person before being subjected to the process which turned him into a superhero. It is often the case with Marvel heroes such as the Hulk or Spider-Man that they were normal before being given superpowers by some kind of scientific experiment or accident.



    Ant-Man's power is in his suit. He's a normal person.



    Superman is a Kryptonian (an alien.) He's not a mutant either; he's normal for a Kryptonian, it's just that being in the proximity of a yellow sun gives Kryptonians superpowers or that they get them when they mature (original origin story says the latter.)



    Batman is another normal person with money and gadgets. He has no superpowers. He's the DC equivalent of Iron Man in that respect. Not a mutant.



    The Flash typically gained his powers through a chemical accident, and was thus not a mutant.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 3





      This just lists the specific cases of particular non-mutants and doesn't answer the question in general.

      – mattdm
      Aug 31 '15 at 16:25






    • 1





      Appears to answer the question as written.

      – fectin
      Jan 28 '17 at 18:06














    46












    46








    46







    Iron Man (in the MCU, at least) is just a genetically normal person with lots of money and technology. Sure, he had an arc reactor in his chest for a while, but he's no mutant. A mutant as seen in the X-Men would be born genetically different from a normal human.



    As noted in the above answer, Captain America was a normal person before being subjected to the process which turned him into a superhero. It is often the case with Marvel heroes such as the Hulk or Spider-Man that they were normal before being given superpowers by some kind of scientific experiment or accident.



    Ant-Man's power is in his suit. He's a normal person.



    Superman is a Kryptonian (an alien.) He's not a mutant either; he's normal for a Kryptonian, it's just that being in the proximity of a yellow sun gives Kryptonians superpowers or that they get them when they mature (original origin story says the latter.)



    Batman is another normal person with money and gadgets. He has no superpowers. He's the DC equivalent of Iron Man in that respect. Not a mutant.



    The Flash typically gained his powers through a chemical accident, and was thus not a mutant.






    share|improve this answer















    Iron Man (in the MCU, at least) is just a genetically normal person with lots of money and technology. Sure, he had an arc reactor in his chest for a while, but he's no mutant. A mutant as seen in the X-Men would be born genetically different from a normal human.



    As noted in the above answer, Captain America was a normal person before being subjected to the process which turned him into a superhero. It is often the case with Marvel heroes such as the Hulk or Spider-Man that they were normal before being given superpowers by some kind of scientific experiment or accident.



    Ant-Man's power is in his suit. He's a normal person.



    Superman is a Kryptonian (an alien.) He's not a mutant either; he's normal for a Kryptonian, it's just that being in the proximity of a yellow sun gives Kryptonians superpowers or that they get them when they mature (original origin story says the latter.)



    Batman is another normal person with money and gadgets. He has no superpowers. He's the DC equivalent of Iron Man in that respect. Not a mutant.



    The Flash typically gained his powers through a chemical accident, and was thus not a mutant.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 28 '18 at 4:02









    Stormblessed

    679120




    679120










    answered Aug 30 '15 at 5:34









    Ras MorthilRas Morthil

    1,4121910




    1,4121910








    • 3





      This just lists the specific cases of particular non-mutants and doesn't answer the question in general.

      – mattdm
      Aug 31 '15 at 16:25






    • 1





      Appears to answer the question as written.

      – fectin
      Jan 28 '17 at 18:06














    • 3





      This just lists the specific cases of particular non-mutants and doesn't answer the question in general.

      – mattdm
      Aug 31 '15 at 16:25






    • 1





      Appears to answer the question as written.

      – fectin
      Jan 28 '17 at 18:06








    3




    3





    This just lists the specific cases of particular non-mutants and doesn't answer the question in general.

    – mattdm
    Aug 31 '15 at 16:25





    This just lists the specific cases of particular non-mutants and doesn't answer the question in general.

    – mattdm
    Aug 31 '15 at 16:25




    1




    1





    Appears to answer the question as written.

    – fectin
    Jan 28 '17 at 18:06





    Appears to answer the question as written.

    – fectin
    Jan 28 '17 at 18:06













    33














    Within Marvel, the term of "mutants" specifically refers to recipients of the "X-gene", homo superior. It is a specific genetic mutation with a wide variety of effects, occasionally indicated to be the "next stage" of human development. As Phyneas indicated, it's not just the X-men — the Morlocks, the Brotherhood of Mutants, and other X-gene carriers are included and there are non-mutant V-men.



    Within the Ultimate Marvel Universe, "mutants" are the result of the Super-Soldier/Weapon X project, but they are similarly considered to be something different from people who are born with certain physical differences, such as Iron Man (he was born with neural tissue throughout his body), by treatments like Captain America (empowered by the Super-Soldier serum), or by technological means like Ant Man (gains his powers through the technical discovery of Pym Particles, although his wife, Wasp, is later revealed to be a mutant despite similar powers).






    share|improve this answer


























    • Personally I think that this is the better answer as it defines the term "mutants" in both the main and Ultimate universe.

      – Thunderforge
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:13











    • Eh, I'm not worried about it. :)

      – FuzzyBoots
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:20
















    33














    Within Marvel, the term of "mutants" specifically refers to recipients of the "X-gene", homo superior. It is a specific genetic mutation with a wide variety of effects, occasionally indicated to be the "next stage" of human development. As Phyneas indicated, it's not just the X-men — the Morlocks, the Brotherhood of Mutants, and other X-gene carriers are included and there are non-mutant V-men.



    Within the Ultimate Marvel Universe, "mutants" are the result of the Super-Soldier/Weapon X project, but they are similarly considered to be something different from people who are born with certain physical differences, such as Iron Man (he was born with neural tissue throughout his body), by treatments like Captain America (empowered by the Super-Soldier serum), or by technological means like Ant Man (gains his powers through the technical discovery of Pym Particles, although his wife, Wasp, is later revealed to be a mutant despite similar powers).






    share|improve this answer


























    • Personally I think that this is the better answer as it defines the term "mutants" in both the main and Ultimate universe.

      – Thunderforge
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:13











    • Eh, I'm not worried about it. :)

      – FuzzyBoots
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:20














    33












    33








    33







    Within Marvel, the term of "mutants" specifically refers to recipients of the "X-gene", homo superior. It is a specific genetic mutation with a wide variety of effects, occasionally indicated to be the "next stage" of human development. As Phyneas indicated, it's not just the X-men — the Morlocks, the Brotherhood of Mutants, and other X-gene carriers are included and there are non-mutant V-men.



    Within the Ultimate Marvel Universe, "mutants" are the result of the Super-Soldier/Weapon X project, but they are similarly considered to be something different from people who are born with certain physical differences, such as Iron Man (he was born with neural tissue throughout his body), by treatments like Captain America (empowered by the Super-Soldier serum), or by technological means like Ant Man (gains his powers through the technical discovery of Pym Particles, although his wife, Wasp, is later revealed to be a mutant despite similar powers).






    share|improve this answer















    Within Marvel, the term of "mutants" specifically refers to recipients of the "X-gene", homo superior. It is a specific genetic mutation with a wide variety of effects, occasionally indicated to be the "next stage" of human development. As Phyneas indicated, it's not just the X-men — the Morlocks, the Brotherhood of Mutants, and other X-gene carriers are included and there are non-mutant V-men.



    Within the Ultimate Marvel Universe, "mutants" are the result of the Super-Soldier/Weapon X project, but they are similarly considered to be something different from people who are born with certain physical differences, such as Iron Man (he was born with neural tissue throughout his body), by treatments like Captain America (empowered by the Super-Soldier serum), or by technological means like Ant Man (gains his powers through the technical discovery of Pym Particles, although his wife, Wasp, is later revealed to be a mutant despite similar powers).







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 28 '18 at 16:20

























    answered Aug 30 '15 at 4:46









    FuzzyBootsFuzzyBoots

    89.9k11280432




    89.9k11280432













    • Personally I think that this is the better answer as it defines the term "mutants" in both the main and Ultimate universe.

      – Thunderforge
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:13











    • Eh, I'm not worried about it. :)

      – FuzzyBoots
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:20



















    • Personally I think that this is the better answer as it defines the term "mutants" in both the main and Ultimate universe.

      – Thunderforge
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:13











    • Eh, I'm not worried about it. :)

      – FuzzyBoots
      Aug 31 '15 at 15:20

















    Personally I think that this is the better answer as it defines the term "mutants" in both the main and Ultimate universe.

    – Thunderforge
    Aug 31 '15 at 15:13





    Personally I think that this is the better answer as it defines the term "mutants" in both the main and Ultimate universe.

    – Thunderforge
    Aug 31 '15 at 15:13













    Eh, I'm not worried about it. :)

    – FuzzyBoots
    Aug 31 '15 at 15:20





    Eh, I'm not worried about it. :)

    – FuzzyBoots
    Aug 31 '15 at 15:20











    3














    The existing answers cover Marvel well, but don't mention DC.



    DC does have characters who would be considered mutants - people who have natural powers due to their genes, as opposed to people who gained powers through some sort of accident. The one that stands out in my mind is Jericho (of New Teen Titans fame). Danny Chase (also a Titan, from The New Titans), who had telekinetic abilities, also seemed to have them due to genetic factors, rather than some accident.



    In 1988 and 1989, DC published a three-part mini-series, Invasion!, where a number of alien races tried to invade and conquer Earth. In the course of this series, we discovered that most (possibly all) of the humans who had acquired super-powers due to accidents have what is called a meta-gene. This appears to be very similar to the "x-gene" mentioned in Marvel's comics; in fact, Marvel has had mutants whose x-gene lay dormant, so they didn't gain powers normally (Lorna Dane, a.k.a. Polaris, is one of these).



    During the Invasion storyline, some characters gained powers



    DC's populace of people with the meta-gene seems to remain dormant far more often than Marvel's mutant population. Most "metahumans" gain their powers in association with some sort of accident, rather than having them simply appear due to the stress of puberty (the normal process for a Marvel mutant).



    DC may not prominently refer to any of their characters who do seem to have powers not related to an accident as mutants because:




    • The term "mutant" is so strongly associated with Marvel; or

    • Because Marvel has the term trademarked (well, 'The New Mutants" is trademarked at least, and re-used often enough to maintain the trademark, I believe).


    After all, the guy who says "Shazam!" was published under titles involving his magic word instead of his name (Captain Marvel) for several decades because Marvel had a trademark on "Captain Marvel"; to the point where DC changed his name to "Shazam", at least for a while.



    I don't think I've seen the "meta-gene" explicitly referred to in more than 10 years. In the post-Flashpoint world, it's unclear if all powered humans (whether due to an accident, or to "natural causes") have the meta-gene as a common explanation or not.



    (OK, I've now seen it in Deathstroke. However, it's possible the writer (Christopher Priest) included it based on his historical knowledge of the DCU, and the editor simply left it in place.)






    share|improve this answer






























      3














      The existing answers cover Marvel well, but don't mention DC.



      DC does have characters who would be considered mutants - people who have natural powers due to their genes, as opposed to people who gained powers through some sort of accident. The one that stands out in my mind is Jericho (of New Teen Titans fame). Danny Chase (also a Titan, from The New Titans), who had telekinetic abilities, also seemed to have them due to genetic factors, rather than some accident.



      In 1988 and 1989, DC published a three-part mini-series, Invasion!, where a number of alien races tried to invade and conquer Earth. In the course of this series, we discovered that most (possibly all) of the humans who had acquired super-powers due to accidents have what is called a meta-gene. This appears to be very similar to the "x-gene" mentioned in Marvel's comics; in fact, Marvel has had mutants whose x-gene lay dormant, so they didn't gain powers normally (Lorna Dane, a.k.a. Polaris, is one of these).



      During the Invasion storyline, some characters gained powers



      DC's populace of people with the meta-gene seems to remain dormant far more often than Marvel's mutant population. Most "metahumans" gain their powers in association with some sort of accident, rather than having them simply appear due to the stress of puberty (the normal process for a Marvel mutant).



      DC may not prominently refer to any of their characters who do seem to have powers not related to an accident as mutants because:




      • The term "mutant" is so strongly associated with Marvel; or

      • Because Marvel has the term trademarked (well, 'The New Mutants" is trademarked at least, and re-used often enough to maintain the trademark, I believe).


      After all, the guy who says "Shazam!" was published under titles involving his magic word instead of his name (Captain Marvel) for several decades because Marvel had a trademark on "Captain Marvel"; to the point where DC changed his name to "Shazam", at least for a while.



      I don't think I've seen the "meta-gene" explicitly referred to in more than 10 years. In the post-Flashpoint world, it's unclear if all powered humans (whether due to an accident, or to "natural causes") have the meta-gene as a common explanation or not.



      (OK, I've now seen it in Deathstroke. However, it's possible the writer (Christopher Priest) included it based on his historical knowledge of the DCU, and the editor simply left it in place.)






      share|improve this answer




























        3












        3








        3







        The existing answers cover Marvel well, but don't mention DC.



        DC does have characters who would be considered mutants - people who have natural powers due to their genes, as opposed to people who gained powers through some sort of accident. The one that stands out in my mind is Jericho (of New Teen Titans fame). Danny Chase (also a Titan, from The New Titans), who had telekinetic abilities, also seemed to have them due to genetic factors, rather than some accident.



        In 1988 and 1989, DC published a three-part mini-series, Invasion!, where a number of alien races tried to invade and conquer Earth. In the course of this series, we discovered that most (possibly all) of the humans who had acquired super-powers due to accidents have what is called a meta-gene. This appears to be very similar to the "x-gene" mentioned in Marvel's comics; in fact, Marvel has had mutants whose x-gene lay dormant, so they didn't gain powers normally (Lorna Dane, a.k.a. Polaris, is one of these).



        During the Invasion storyline, some characters gained powers



        DC's populace of people with the meta-gene seems to remain dormant far more often than Marvel's mutant population. Most "metahumans" gain their powers in association with some sort of accident, rather than having them simply appear due to the stress of puberty (the normal process for a Marvel mutant).



        DC may not prominently refer to any of their characters who do seem to have powers not related to an accident as mutants because:




        • The term "mutant" is so strongly associated with Marvel; or

        • Because Marvel has the term trademarked (well, 'The New Mutants" is trademarked at least, and re-used often enough to maintain the trademark, I believe).


        After all, the guy who says "Shazam!" was published under titles involving his magic word instead of his name (Captain Marvel) for several decades because Marvel had a trademark on "Captain Marvel"; to the point where DC changed his name to "Shazam", at least for a while.



        I don't think I've seen the "meta-gene" explicitly referred to in more than 10 years. In the post-Flashpoint world, it's unclear if all powered humans (whether due to an accident, or to "natural causes") have the meta-gene as a common explanation or not.



        (OK, I've now seen it in Deathstroke. However, it's possible the writer (Christopher Priest) included it based on his historical knowledge of the DCU, and the editor simply left it in place.)






        share|improve this answer















        The existing answers cover Marvel well, but don't mention DC.



        DC does have characters who would be considered mutants - people who have natural powers due to their genes, as opposed to people who gained powers through some sort of accident. The one that stands out in my mind is Jericho (of New Teen Titans fame). Danny Chase (also a Titan, from The New Titans), who had telekinetic abilities, also seemed to have them due to genetic factors, rather than some accident.



        In 1988 and 1989, DC published a three-part mini-series, Invasion!, where a number of alien races tried to invade and conquer Earth. In the course of this series, we discovered that most (possibly all) of the humans who had acquired super-powers due to accidents have what is called a meta-gene. This appears to be very similar to the "x-gene" mentioned in Marvel's comics; in fact, Marvel has had mutants whose x-gene lay dormant, so they didn't gain powers normally (Lorna Dane, a.k.a. Polaris, is one of these).



        During the Invasion storyline, some characters gained powers



        DC's populace of people with the meta-gene seems to remain dormant far more often than Marvel's mutant population. Most "metahumans" gain their powers in association with some sort of accident, rather than having them simply appear due to the stress of puberty (the normal process for a Marvel mutant).



        DC may not prominently refer to any of their characters who do seem to have powers not related to an accident as mutants because:




        • The term "mutant" is so strongly associated with Marvel; or

        • Because Marvel has the term trademarked (well, 'The New Mutants" is trademarked at least, and re-used often enough to maintain the trademark, I believe).


        After all, the guy who says "Shazam!" was published under titles involving his magic word instead of his name (Captain Marvel) for several decades because Marvel had a trademark on "Captain Marvel"; to the point where DC changed his name to "Shazam", at least for a while.



        I don't think I've seen the "meta-gene" explicitly referred to in more than 10 years. In the post-Flashpoint world, it's unclear if all powered humans (whether due to an accident, or to "natural causes") have the meta-gene as a common explanation or not.



        (OK, I've now seen it in Deathstroke. However, it's possible the writer (Christopher Priest) included it based on his historical knowledge of the DCU, and the editor simply left it in place.)







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 23 mins ago

























        answered Dec 28 '18 at 19:07









        RDFozzRDFozz

        5,81211551




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