WOLVERINE
(of Earth-95099)

Real Name: Logan (see comments)

Identity/Class: Extradimensional/Alternate Earth (Earth-95099) human mutant

Occupation: Resistance member

Group Membership: The Mutant Resistance (Angel, Banshee, Beast/Henry McCoy, Blink, Caliban, Callisto, Colossus, Copycat, Frenzy, Gambit, Nurse Jean Grey, Magneto, Masque, Mastermind, Mimic, Mister Sinister, Morph, Nemesis, Nightcrawler, Polaris, Pyro, Rogue, Sabretooth, Storm, Doctor Summers, Sunder, Sunfire, Tar Baby, Wildchild)

Affiliations: Bishop of Earth-31393, the Mutant Resistance (Storm, numerous others), Shard of Earth-121893

Enemies: Enforcers (circa 2055 A.D.), Forge (circa 2055 A.D.), Moose of Earth-92131, Nimrod of Earth-121893, Rocco of Earth-92131, Super-Humans (Black Widow, Daredevil, Giant-Man, Hercules, Iron Man, Patriot, Scarlet Spider, Wasp), Land-Crabs

Known Relatives: Ororo Munroe (Storm, wife)

Aliases: "Tough Guy" (pet name from Storm)

Base of Operations: The Mutant Resistance camp, unidentified location on Earth-95099

First Appearance: X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 1" (September 9, 1995)

Powers/Abilities: Wolverine, like his Earth-616 counterpart, had retractable bone claws that extend from his forehands. These claws and his entire skeleton had been coated with the indestructible metal, Adamantium.

Wolverine also possessed a superhuman healing factor that heals serious injuries within a span of minutes and he had superhuman senses, allowing him to track other beings by sense of smell.

Height: 5'3" (by approximation)
Weight: 300 lbs. (by approximation)
Eyes: Blue
Hair: Black

History: (X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode - "One Man's Worth, Part 1" (fb) - BTS) - Wolverine and Storm married.

(X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 1") - After embracing one another, Wolverine and Storm ran for cover as a group of non-mutant Super-Humans attacked the Mutant Resistance. Beast soon jumped and shoved both Wolverine and Storm into a trench as Iron Man fired on the two, warning them that the humans had sent in another wave of Land-Crabs. When the Mutant Resistance's leader was surrounded, Wolverine suggested assisting but Storm warned that they couldn't hope to stop the Land-Crabs alone. Replying that they had no choice, Wolverine kissed Storm and insisted that they had to help the leader, remarking that if they lost Magneto, they would lose the war.

    Working with the rest of the Mutant Resistance, Wolverine jumped onto one of the Land-Crabs and began slashing before Storm warned him to get clear. Unfortunately, Storm was hit and fell to the ground as Wolverine was knocked from the Land-Crab, unconscious. Regaining consciousness, Wolverine saw the downed Storm and ran to his wife's side, begging her not to leave him. Storm soon recovered and smiled, commenting that Wolverine was stuck with her a bit longer. As Magneto downed one of the human transports, a group of Super-Humans emerged and the Patriot fired cables at Wolverine, who slashed them and rushed back into battle. After the Super-Humans were hurled away from the battle by a mutant energy field generator, Wolverine carried Storm back to the Mutant Resistance camp and asked where he could find Doctor Summers. One of the humans' robots followed, however, and Wolverine and Storm were forced to duck for cover as Mastermind generated an illusion that fooled the robot into leaving.

    As Storm insisted she was fine and asked Wolverine to make sure they were clear of danger, Earth-31393's Bishop and Earth-121893's Shard arrived from Earth-121893's 2055 A.D. from a time portal and began talking about how they arrived too late to stop their reality's Trevor Fitzroy and Nimrod from killing Charles Xavier. Overhearing Bishop and Shard's conversation, Wolverine angrily confronted Bishop and Shard and demanded they talk while they were still able. Happy to see counterparts of the X-Men they knew, Bishop and Shard were asked by Wolverine how they knew their names and what X-Men were. After hearing Bishop and Shard's story about the inspirational X-Men and how they planned to travel back to 1959 to prevent the assassination of Charles Xavier, Wolverine and Storm were drawn into another battle against the humans' robots and, with Bishop and Shard's help, they managed to get to safety.

    Shard then showed Wolverine and Storm a hologram of Earth-92131's Charles Xavier and the accomplishments he had provided for mutantkind. Bishop and Shard then explained that someone from their time had traveled into the past to kill Xavier before he had been able to form his X-Men or help mutants, creating the divergent reality of Earth-95099 in which Wolverine and Storm now lived. Upon hearing Bishop and Shard's story, Wolverine refused to believe it and nearly attacked Bishop before Storm calmed him, explaining that she believed their story. As Storm expressed interest in aiding Bishop and Shard in their mission to prevent Xavier's assassination, Wolverine revealed his misgivings after having seen that on Earth-92131, they worked together but were not married. Bishop confirmed Wolverine's misgivings and when Storm asked if Wolverine would condemn an entire reality for the sake of their love, Wolverine replied that he would, asking why he would care about anything else. Kissing Wolverine, Storm apologized and decided to join up with Bishop and Shard, prompting Wolverine to reluctantly join them as well.

    Bishop and Shard then showed Wolverine and Storm a hologram of Earth-121893's Trevor Fitzroy plotting with his reality's Master Mold to assassinate Charles Xavier before giving Wolverine and Storm temporal bracelets that would allow them to remain in a reality not their own. Wolverine then accompanied Storm, Bishop and Shard to Earth-95099's past circa May 11, 1959 at Bard College, where they confronted a still-living Charles Xavier and revealed that they had come from the future to prevent his death. Retiring to the nearby Rip Van Winkle Coffee House, Bishop and Shard showed Xavier holograms of their own Sentinel-ridden future, and Wolverine accepted the coffee from the waitress, remarking that it had been awhile since he had real coffee. When the coffee shop owner noticed Wolverine sitting with the African-American Storm, he angrily confronted them and Wolverine fought back, unsheathing his claws and forced the owner to apologize for insulting the woman he loved. When Storm warned Wolverine not to hurt the man, Wolverine reminded the owner that Storm had just saved his life before tossing the man over the shop's counter. Wolverine's threat terrified the shop patrons into fleeing, and the owner soon sent bouncers named Moose and Rocco after Wolverine. Ordered by Shard to keep the bouncers away from Xavier, Wolverine gladly fought off the bouncers with the help of a patron who pulled the rug out from beneath the bouncers. During the scuffle, Wolverine stabbed the owner's rolling pin and Storm eventually calmed Wolverine, reminding Wolverine that his temper was only making things worse before the four heroes realized Xavier had fled in the panic.

    Hiding outside the Coffee House as police arrived, Bishop and Shard suggested they all search for Xavier, and Storm berated Wolverine for losing his temper. Wolverine admitted that the thought of losing Storm if their reality's existence was prevented had made him edgy, and Storm confessed her knowledge of Wolverine's feelings before suggesting they take Bishop and Shard's advice and search for Xavier. When Storm found who she thought was Xavier, the "Xavier" revealed itself to be Earth-121893's shape-shifting Nimrod and blasted Storm, who was caught by Wolverine. Wolverine then joined Bishop and Shard in attacking Nimrod, slashing its back, only to be electrified by the wiring inside. After Storm destroyed Nimrod, Wolverine witnessed Bishop and Shard locating Trevor Fitzroy and his ally Bantam, who both fled into the timestream. Nimrod soon began reconstituting itself and, moments later, Wolverine sensed the triggering of an electronic fuse, unaware that it was Xavier, who had inadvertently triggered the fuse on a bomb set by Fitzroy.

(X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 2") - Hearing the bomb, Wolverine, Storm, Bishop and Shard rushed to Bard College but were knocked back by the explosions. Feeling as if he had failed his mission, Bishop pointed blame at Wolverine and the two nearly got into a fight before the police arrived with the coffee bar owner whom Wolverine had earlier attacked. Wolverine and Bishop prepared to fight the mob, but Storm incapacitated the mob with a whirlwind and when Shard suggested traveling to their time in hopes it still existed and using its time portal to travel again to before Xavier was killed, Wolverine, tired of trying to save a man he didn't even know, angrily demanded that Bishop and Shard deposit Storm and himself in their home reality. Storm convinced Wolverine to remain with the mission and he reluctantly accompanied Bishop and Shard back to their proper 2055 time, only to find themselves in the divergent 2055 of Wolverine and Storm's Earth-95099 reality, in which Master Mold ruled the world. When they attempted to use the time portal in this divergent 2055, Earth-95099's Forge discovered Wolverine and the others and activated an intruder alarm but Wolverine silenced the alarm with his claws. Forge insisted they not use the time portal, terrified at the repercussions, and Wolverine laughingly asked who could scare Forge worse than he could; but when the impatient Storm activated the time portal, gigantic Enforcer Sentinels arrived to stop them. Bishop managed to destroy one of the Enforcers, but when Storm was injured battling another, Wolverine flew into a berserker rage and slashed apart the second Enforcer, eventually getting knocked back by the subsequent explosion. Storm rushed to his side, fearful that he had been killed, but Wolverine got back up and kissed a thankful Storm.

    Wolverine then threatened the divergent Forge, who reluctantly agreed to help repair the time portal after seeing that the Enforcers cared little for him. As Forge repaired the portal, Earth-121893's Fitzroy, Bantam and Nimrod attempted to convince Earth-95099's Master Mold that they had successfully killed Charles Xavier to create the reality in which Master Mold now existed, and Master Mold asked what had become of Wolverine, Storm, Bishop and Shard. When Fitzroy laughed them off, thinking they posed no threat, Master Mold received notice of unregistered mutants existing and ordered Nimrod and Fitzroy to destroy the four temporally displaced mutants as well as Forge's time machine. More Enforcers soon arrived at Forge's time machine as Forge repaired the severe damage from the earlier battle. During the ensuing conflict, Wolverine freed himself from an Enforcer's grasp by cutting off its hand moments before Bishop and Storm assisted in destroying the Enforcer. More Enforcers arrived, followed by Earth-121893's Nimrod, Fitzroy and Bantam, and Wolverine and the others were surprised when Fitzroy aided them against Nimrod and the Enforcers. Forge soon managed to get the time machine functioning, and Fitzroy gave Bishop an information disc explaining why he had aided them as Bishop ordered Wolverine and the others into the portal. Storm suggested staying behind to aid the injured Fitzroy, but Wolverine announced that it was too late for him. When Nimrod fired on Wolverine, Shard intercepted the blast, saving Wolverine's life at the cost of her own. As Shard died, she pleaded with Bishop to go with Wolverine and Storm, promising that if Bishop succeeded in saving Xavier's life in the past, she would be fine. Wolverine helped Bishop to his feet and the two entered the time portal as Nimrod moved in to finish off Shard and Forge.

    Arriving back in Earth-92131's past circa 1959 minutes before Xavier had been killed, Wolverine and Bishop informed Storm of Shard's death before viewing the information disc Fitzroy had given them. Xavier, fleeing the coffee house in which the earlier temporal counterpart of Wolverine was fighting the owner and some bouncers, soon ran into Bishop, Wolverine, and Storm and Wolverine threatened Xavier to come with them, terrifying Xavier into fainting. After Xavier recovered, Wolverine, Storm and Bishop accompanied him to Bard College's science lab, where they revealed that Xavier was going to be blown up. Wolverine assured the disbelieving Xavier that Fitzroy would not succeed this time and when Xavier still seemed to disbelieve their story of his impending assassination, Storm suggested Xavier read the minds of Wolverine, Bishop and herself. Xavier reluctantly did so and learned that they were telling the truth but noted that one of them did not wish for the mission to succeed. Bishop immediately accused Wolverine, and Wolverine admitted that while he did not wish for the mission's success to undo his love for Storm, he would not turn traitor. A classmate of Xavier's, Cindy, soon came in, and Xavier explained to Cindy who Wolverine and the others were, but Wolverine's senses picked up the scent of Earth-121893s Nimrod, who revealed itself as Cindy. Wolverine ferociously slashed Nimrod, and the group managed to destroy Nimrod, who quickly reformed and nearly killed Wolverine before Bishop blasted Nimrod's temporal wristband, forcing Nimrod back to its own time and reality. As Wolverine healed from his wounds, Earth-121893's earlier temporal incarnation of Fitzroy and Bantam arrived to kill Xavier, tossing a bomb onto the ground and trapping Xavier and the heroes with the bomb using an energy field projector. The heroes managed to convince Fitzroy to stop his assassination attempt by showing him video footage from the information disc his future self had given Bishop and Fitzroy dissipated the energy shield, allowing Wolverine to grab the bomb and hurl it outside mere seconds before it harmlessly exploded in the air. With Xavier's death averted, the past temporal counterparts of Earth-95099 Wolverine and Storm, and Bishop and Shard ceased to exist, and Fitzroy absorbed some of Xavier's life force to open a portal back to his own time and reality.

(X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 2"/X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "Beyond Good & Evil, Part 1: The End of Time" (fb)) - Wolverine and Storm then wondered why they still existed if Xavier's death had prevented the divergence of their own timeline, and Bishop explained that their temporal wristbands kept them alive outside of time. Wolverine then asked how long the wristbands would keep them in existence, and Bishop revealed the wristbands' temporal charge would only last a maximum of a couple of days. Wolverine then embraced Storm, commenting that their time together had been good, and Storm replied that it was the best as Bishop returned to Earth-121893's 2055.

(X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 2") - Crying, Storm told Wolverine that she loved him. Asking that Storm not leave him alone, Wolverine kissed Storm as the pair deactivated their temporal wristbands and seemingly ceased to exist as Earth-92131's timeline corrected itself. Back in the present day of Earth-92131, Xavier witnessed that reality's Storm and Wolverine enjoying a picnic and recalled their Earth-95099 counterparts he had met in 1959.

Comments: Created by Richard Mueller and AKOM Production Company (see Appearances list for a list of artists involved).

    To clarify between all of the various realities seen in the "One Man's Worth" storyline, Earth-92131 is the normal reality of X-Men: The Animated Series. Earth-31393 is the original home reality of the Bishop seen in the cartoon and when he stopped the assassination in the "Days of Future Past" storyline, he returned to Earth-121893, in which the assassination was averted and he had a sister, Shard. This reality's Trevor Fitzroy traveled into the past of Earth-92131 circa 1959 in an attempt to kill Xavier, an act that was ultimately thwarted by Bishop and his allies. Earth-95099 is the reality in which Trevor Fitzroy succeeded in killing Xavier and the reality in which this profile's Wolverine hailed from.

    Wolverine's height and weight were approximated from that of his Earth-616 counterpart.

    At the time these X-Men episodes aired, Wolverine's only non-codename was Logan, which we comic readers found out in the early 2000s was just an alias and his real name was James Howlett. However, since this Wolverine is from a divergent/alternate reality, it's very possible that his real name WAS Logan in this reality.

Profile by Proto-Man.

CLARIFICATIONS:
Earth-95099's Wolverine has no known connections to:


images: (without ads)
X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 2" (Wolverine main image & unsheathing claws)
X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 1" (Wolverine closeup headshot, jumping over cables, headshot with Storm & running images)


Appearances:
X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 1" (September 9, 1995) - Richard Mueller (writer), Frank Brunner (model design), Mark Lewis (model design, prop design, storyboard cleanup), Darrel Bowen, Warren Greenwood, Andre Nieves, Steve Olds, Shayne Poindexter (prop design), Claude Denis (prop design, layout design), Marco Borregales (prop design, storyboard cleanup), Cesar Magsombol, Zhaoping Wei (layout design), Patricio Agnasin (layout design, storyboard cleanup), Tenny Henson (layout design, storyboards, storyboard cleanup), Frank Squillance (layout design, storyboards), Jerry Acerno, Troy D. Adomitis, Patrick Archibald, Dell Barras, Francisco Barrios, Armando Carillo, Greg Garcia, Rick Hoberg, Tom Nesbitt, David Simons, Keith Tucker, Dan Veesenmeyer (storyboards), Romeo Francisco, Michael Sosnowski (storyboards, storyboard cleanup), Gerald Forton, Ernie G. Guanlao, Abel Laxamana, Romeo Lopez, Tec Manalac (storyboard cleanup), AKOM Production Company (animation), Larry Houston (producer, director), J.K. Kim, Sue Peters (animation directors), Eric Lewald (story editor)
X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "One Man's Worth, Part 2" (September 16, 1995) - Gary Greenfield (writer), Frank Brunner (model design), Mark Lewis (model design, prop design, storyboard cleanup), Darrel Bowen, Warren Greenwood, Andre Nieves, Steve Olds, Shayne Poindexter (prop design), Claude Denis (prop design, layout design), Marcos Borregales (prop design, storyboard cleanup), Cesar Magsombol, Zhaoping Wei (layout design), Tenny Henson (layout design, storyboards, storyboard cleanup), Frank Squillance (layout design, storyboards), Patricio Agnasin (layout design, storyboard cleanup), Jerry Acerno, Troy D. Adomitis, Patrick Archibald, Dell Barras, Francisco Barrios, Armando Carrillo, Greg Garcia, Rick Hoberg, Tom Nesbitt, David Simons, Keith Tucker, Dan Veesenmeyer (storyboards), Romeo Francisco, Michael Sosnowski (storyboards, storyboard cleanup), Gerald Forton, Ernie G. Guanlao, Abel Laxamana, Romeo Lopez, Tec Manalac (storyboard cleanup), AKOM Production Company (animation), Larry Houston (producer, director), J.K. Kim, Sue Peters (animation directors), Eric Lewald (story editor)
X-Men: The Animated Series cartoon episode, "Beyond Good & Evil, Part 1: The End of Time" (November 4, 1995) - Steve Cuden (writer), Frank Brunner (model design), Mark Lewis (model design, prop design, storyboard cleanup), Darrel Bowen, Warren Greenwood, Andre Nieves, Steve Olds, Shayne Poindexter (prop design),
Claude Denis (prop design, layout design), Marco Borregales (prop design, storyboard cleanup), Cesar Magsombol, Zhaoping Wei (layout design), Patricio Agnasin (layout design, storyboard cleanup), Tenny Henson (layout design, storyboards, storyboard cleanup), Frank Squillance (layout design, storyboards, line producer), Jerry Acerno, Troy D. Adomitis, Patrick Archibald, Dell Barras, Francisco Barrios, Armando Carillo, Greg Garcia, Rick Hoberg, Tom Nesbitt, David Simons, Keith Tucker, Dan Veesmeyer (storyboards), Romeo Francisco, Michael Sosnowski (storyboards, storyboard cleanup), Gerald Forton, Ernie G. Guanlao, Abel Laxamana, Romeo Lopez, Tec Manalac (storyboard cleanup), AKOM Production Company (animation), J.K. Kim, Sue Peters (animation directors), Eric Lewald (story editor)


First Posted: 10/14/2019
Last updated: 10/14/2019

Any Additions/Corrections? please let me know.

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