Not a huge fan of Gen X for a variety of reasons, but I remember liking the "reveal" at the end that the "mutant" here wasn't actually a mutant at all, just a human kid with a disfiguring disability.
I think that counts as a mutant. Mutations are not always positive, and I don't just mean the comic-booky ones. The Elephant Man was a mutant, after all. According to the dictionary, here's what a mutant is: "An animal or plant with inheritable characteristics that differ from those of the parents". So, if my parents both have brown eyes and I have green ones, that makes me a mutant - and presumably, this poor guy being a disfigured freak makes him a mutant, too.
Yeah, but Marvel has two kinds of mutants. The same kind as we do in the real world, and X-gene mutants, and we see a damnsight more of the latter than the former.
And if your eyes are green, then no you're not a mutant AFAIK, just a result of complex genes from your parents coming to the fore.
Okay, bad example - let's say if I was a dwarf. Dwarfism is not, as far as I know, a hereditary condition - dwarves giving birth to dwarfish children is very rare. So, effectively, Dwarfism is spread via mutation. (I'm no authority on this, mind you, but it sounds right to me.) And we may see much more of the X-gene type, but that doesn't make the other kind any less legitimate as mutants. I recall one story that had a hideously deformed man locked up in a holding cell somewhere in Russia - the story involved Omega Red somehow, I think - and there was some talk about how most mutants are not monstrous at all, but every now and then you come across one that fits the stereotype. This guy was huge, and proportionately strong, but he didn't have any particular mutant powers - he was just an insane freak that the Russian government had locked away for some reason.
I'm not sure that's true - X-genes may provide some of the more spectacular examples of mutation in the Marvel U, but your average Joe Schmoe on the street doesn't know that. As far as they're concerned, a guy who's covered with hair or has claws instead of fingernails is a mutant, same as any other.
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According to the dictionary, here's what a mutant is: "An animal or plant with inheritable characteristics that differ from those of the parents". So, if my parents both have brown eyes and I have green ones, that makes me a mutant - and presumably, this poor guy being a disfigured freak makes him a mutant, too.
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And if your eyes are green, then no you're not a mutant AFAIK, just a result of complex genes from your parents coming to the fore.
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And we may see much more of the X-gene type, but that doesn't make the other kind any less legitimate as mutants. I recall one story that had a hideously deformed man locked up in a holding cell somewhere in Russia - the story involved Omega Red somehow, I think - and there was some talk about how most mutants are not monstrous at all, but every now and then you come across one that fits the stereotype. This guy was huge, and proportionately strong, but he didn't have any particular mutant powers - he was just an insane freak that the Russian government had locked away for some reason.
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