Cable (comics)

Cable

Cover of Cable vol. 2, #1 (March 2008)
Art by Ariel Olivetti
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance As Nathan Summers:
Uncanny X-Men #201 (January 1986)
As Cable:
New Mutants #87 (March 1990)
Created by
In-story information
Alter ego Nathan Christopher Charles Summers
Species Human Mutant
Team affiliations
Partnerships
Notable aliases Nathan Winters, Nathan Dayspring, Askani'son, Soldier X, Chosen One, Traveler
Abilities

Cable (Nathan Summers) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with X-Force and the X-Men. The character first appeared as a newborn infant in Uncanny X-Men #201 (Jan. 1986) created by writer Chris Claremont, while Cable's adult identity was created by writer Louise Simonson and artist/co-writer Rob Liefeld and first appeared in The New Mutants #87 (March 1990).

Nathan Summers is the biological son of the X-Man Cyclops (Scott Summers) and Madelyne Pryor (Jean Grey's clone), the "half" brother of Rachel Summers and Nate Grey, and the genetic template for Stryfe. He is from a possible future timeline, having been transported as an infant to the future, where he grew into a warrior, before returning to the present.

Josh Brolin will portray Cable in the X-Men film series, beginning with Deadpool 2.[1]

Publication history

Creation

The character's first appearance was in The New Mutants #86 (Feb. 1990). He does not appear anywhere in the issue's story, but the "next issue" teaser includes a small drawing of the character. This was followed by a full appearance in The New Mutants #87 (March 1990). Though the artist Rob Liefeld is responsible for his visual design, name, and much of his personality, it is claimed that Cable also got some inspiration from editor Bob Harras.[2] Liefeld explains the creation of the character:

I was given a directive to create a new leader for the New Mutants. There was no name, no description besides a 'man of action', the opposite of Xavier. I created the look, the name, much of the history of the character. After I named him Cable, Bob suggested Quinn and Louise had Commander X.[3]

New Mutants and X-Force

Cable is first seen in conflict with Stryfe's Mutant Liberation Front,[4] the United States government, and Freedom Force.[5] The New Mutants intervened and he asked for their help against the Mutant Liberation Front.[6] Cable saw them as potential soldiers in his war against Stryfe. He became their new teacher and leader, and outfitted them.[7] He came into conflict with Wolverine,[8] noting that the two had an old feud between them. Cable and the New Mutants teamed up with Wolverine and Sunfire against the MLF.[9] Cable also led the New Mutants against the Genoshans.[10]

The New Mutants #87 (March 1990); art by Rob Liefeld and Todd McFarlane

With the aid of Domino, Cable reorganized the New Mutants into X-Force.[11] The New Mutants ended with issue #100, with Cable and other characters then appearing the following month in X-Force #1.[11] The X-Force series provided further detail for the character's back story revealing that he was from the future and that he had traveled to the past with the aim of stopping Stryfe's plans as well as preventing Apocalypse's rise to power. Cable traveled between the 1990s and his future with his ship Graymalkin, which contained a sentient computer program called Professor, the future version of the program built into X-Factor's Ship.

In 1992, the character had a two issue miniseries, titled Cable: Blood and Metal, written by Fabian Nicieza, pencilled by John Romita, Jr., and inked by Dan Green, published in October and November of that year. The series explored Cable and the villain Stryfe's ongoing battle with one another, and its effect on the people that surround Cable.

Cable (vol. 1) and Soldier X

Shortly after Blood and Metal, Cable was given his own ongoing series titled Cable. Issue #6 (Dec. 1993) confirmed the character to be Nathan Christopher Summers, the son of Cyclops (Scott Summers) and Madelyne Pryor (Jean Grey's clone) who had been taken to the future in X-Factor #68 (July 1991), introduced by writer Chris Claremont, and appeared in Uncanny X-Men #201 (Jan. 1986). The series ran for 107 issues from May 1993 until September 2002 before being relaunched as Soldier X, which lasted 12 more issues until Aug. 2003.

The 1994 miniseries The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix provided further information on the character's back story. In the future, Mother Askani, a time-displaced Rachel Summers, pulled the minds of Scott and Jean into the future where, as "Slym" and "Redd", they raised Cable for twelve years. During their time together, the "family" prevented Apocalypse from transferring his essence into a new body, ending his reign of terror.[12] It is furthermore established that Mister Sinister created Cyclops' son Nathan (who became the time-traveling soldier Cable) to destroy Apocalypse.[13]

Cable and Deadpool, Cable (vol. 2)

The character's co-creator, Rob Liefeld, holding up a copy of New Mutants #87, in which the character first appeared

After his solo series ended, he was paired with the mercenary Deadpool in a new ongoing series titled Cable & Deadpool.[14] The series largely dealt with Cable's efforts to change the world for the better, including turning his old spaceship Greymalkin into the floating utopian island of Providence.[15] The first story arc of the series features a Cable that has learned to suppress his techno-organic virus to a nearly effortless degree, allowing him to access the better part of his vast psionic powers. He gains a power level similar to his Nate Grey counterpart from The Age of Apocalypse reality and tries to use them to force the people of the world to live in peace. Using his powers at this magnitude also means that he will die due to the vast power being too much for his body to continuously maintain. He tries to carry out his plans quickly, defeating the X-Men, Six Pack and S.H.I.E.L.D. with little effort. They turn the tide of the battle on Cable by enlisting the aid of the Silver Surfer. Cable and the Silver Surfer battled, destroying buildings and other structures but were immediately rebuilt by Cable's vast telekinesis. All the while Cable tried to explain his good intentions to the Surfer with no avail. Although Cable destroyed his board and briefly held his own against the Surfer, he was ultimately defeated when the Surfer destroyed Cable's arm. Around the same time period, Cable becomes a member of a team of X-Men that consists of Rogue, Iceman, Cannonball, Sabretooth, Mystique, Lady Mastermind, and Omega Sentinel. In preparation for Messiah Complex, Cable seemingly died when he detonated Providence to prevent Gambit and Sunfire from stealing his database, causing the series to focus mostly on Deadpool for the next six or so issues. This series was canceled at the fiftieth issue and was replaced by two series starring each of the characters.

It is revealed that Cable survived, and has the mutant baby girl that the X-Men, Marauders, and Purifiers have been seeking during the Messiah Complex storyline.[16] In 2008, Marvel Comics released Cable vol. 2, a new ongoing series by Duane Swierczynski and artist Ariel Olivetti.[17] This new series directly follows the events of "Messiah Complex". The series features Cable, and the messianic child's time traveling adventures. The dangers of the future and pursuit by Bishop are balanced with the humor of "Cable the soldier" becoming "Cable the Nanny."[18]

It is revealed that Cable and the mutant messiah have taken refuge in the future in the secluded safe haven of New Liberty. There, Cable gets married to a resident, Hope, who later dies defending the child. Cable decides to name her Hope, in honor of her deceased foster mother.[19]

In 2009, Cable vol. 2 had a seven-issue crossover with X-Force, X-Force/Cable: Messiah War, which is the second story in a three-part storyline that began in X-Men: Messiah Complex.[20]

After the events of the Messiah War, Hope and Cable are separated in time, appearing in the same spot but in different years. When Cable touches down from the spot, he appears two years after Hope, and is steadily losing control of his body due to the techno-organic virus within him. It alters his appearance so much that Hope doesn't register Cable's face. Eventually, Bishop, using his codename as a way to portray himself as a holy figure, gains on them, and Cable and Hope jettison themselves into space in the last ship the planet had. Bishop, armed with a thermonuclear device in the stump of his arm, states that he knows how to make his own ship and it'll only be a matter of time.

Cable was canceled in April 2010 with issue #25 (the final issue being called Deadpool and Cable #25).[21]

In the 2010 storyline "Second Coming", Cable succumbs to the techno-organic virus in his bloodstream while holding open a time-portal that allowed other members of X-Force to escape from the future. The death was shown in X-Force #28 written by Craig Kyle and Chris Yost, who noted that, "For us, Cable was always a character whose death was something the character himself would put forward — if that's what it took to complete his mission, he wouldn't think twice about it."[22]

Avengers: X-Sanction

On July 27, 2011, Marvel announced at the San Diego Comic Con the return of Cable. The new project, originally titled as "Cable Reborn", was re-titled as Avengers: X-Sanction, written by Jeph Loeb and drawn by Ed McGuinness. The miniseries served as a lead-in to the Avengers vs. X-Men storyline beginning in April 2012.[23][24][25]

Having been teleported to the future during his last act, Cable learned from his old mentor, Blaquesmith, that Hope will apparently die in some future accident caused by the Avengers, prompting him to go back in time and try to use his last 24 hours of life before the techno-organic virus completely consumes his body to stop the Avengers before they can kill Hope.[26]

Although he manages to defeat Captain America, Falcon, and Iron Man, he is caught off-guard when he is attacked by the Red Hulk, initially assuming that the Red Hulk is "Talbot," a foe from the future, before the Red Hulk informs him with grim satisfaction that he is actually someone who Cable has never fought before.[27] With the aid of Blaquesmith – flashbacks revealing that they discovered various anti-mutant technologies in the Avengers Mansion – Cable manages to fight off the Red Hulk, partially infecting him with the techno-organic virus, only to be interrupted by Hope and Cyclops, who both denounce his actions as unnecessary, culminating in Wolverine and Spider-Man attacking him as they vow to take back the Avengers.[28] During the fight with Wolverine, Spider-Man is taken out by Cyclops, and Blaquesmith convinces Hope to counter Cable's moves by freeing the Avengers, ripping out the bomb that Cable threatened would blow them up while Red Hulk burned the techno-organic virus out of his system.

The Avengers then proceeded to fight Cable until he was nearly dead from both the fight and the virus, and Cyclops asked to take his son home, with Captain America insisting the Avengers keep the weapons and ship. Back at Utopia, Blaquesmith helps Hope to realize that she can still save Cable, and she begins to absorb the techno-organic virus before fully manifesting the Phoenix Force raptor for the first time around herself. When it vanishes, Cable is cured not only of the advanced incursion of the virus, but apparently fully, as his left hand is shown to be fully organic along with his left eye, but he remains in a catatonic state. Afterwards, Cable and Cyclops speak telepathically, with Cable informing his father that Hope is indeed the Phoenix and is destined to save Earth from an unknown disaster. He goes on to say that a war will come with the Avengers and that he needs Cyclops to protect Hope. Cable promises to be there when he's needed in the future.[29]

Cable and X-Force

Cable's next appearance was in a new series, Cable and X-Force by writer Dennis Hopeless and artist Salvador Larroca. The series debuted in December 2012 and features Cable and a new fugitive team, unofficially referred to by the Marvel Universe media as the new "X-Force".[30] This version of X-Force initially consists of Cable, Colossus, Doctor Nemesis, Domino, and Forge.[31] This series focuses on eliminating disasters based on mysterious visions that Cable is receiving, resorting to occasionally more brutal methods than the prime X-teams would use. After the events of "Avengers X-Sanction" Cable is forced to wear an eye patch and an advanced harness for his non-functioning left arm that was created by Forge. Although Hope healed his arm, it is useless because it is not his original arm as it has been destroyed a few times, notably in his battles with Silver Surfer and Bastion.

X-Force

Continuing from Cable and X-Force Cable puts together a new X-Force team with Psylocke, Dr. Nemesis, Fantomex and Marrow in order to track down and deal with mutant threats using lethal force. The story is written by X-Men: Legacy writer Simon Spurrier. Cable is infected with an extra-dimensional virus that provides super powers at the cost of killing them in around a year, however Cable is injected with an early version designed to kill him in a day. [32] Cable's daughter Hope accidentally copies this virus, since it is based on super powers, and has to be placed into a coma in order to save her life.[32] Cable cannot defeat the virus either, so he creates a new clone each day to replace himself but each clone still has only one day to live. Cable and X-Force eventually track down the man Volga who created the virus and defeat him. However, Fantomex goes insane from needing to "be the best" and betrays the team using new god-like powers derived from the Volga virus.[33] Cable unleashes hundreds of his clones to fight him, with Hope eventually stopping Fantomex before the last clone is killed so Cable can live on. Hope then takes over as leader of X-Force and "fires" Cable for his morally questionable methods.[34]

Cable and Deadpool: Split Seconds

After travelling through time and fixing several mistakes that a future Deadpool caused, Cable and present-Deadpool eventually fix the timeline. The effects on the timeline causes Cable to revert to his original "status quo", with his robotic arm and his original telekinesis and telepathic power set.[35]

Uncanny Avengers

Cable is seen in the year 2087 dealing with some unidentified issue related to Stryfe, in the aftermath of an Inhuman attack that covers the city in sentient plant-life.[36] He eventually joins the rest of the Uncanny Avengers in the present and helps deal with the Inhuman causing the problems, before deciding to join the team when he learns the team's true mission is dealing with the Red Skull with Professor Xavier's brain and powers.[37] After Captain America disbands the Uncanny Avengers in the aftermath of Civil War II, Rogue continues the team in their mission to stop the Red Skull.[38]

Powers and abilities

Cable was born with telepathic and telekinetic abilities. However, the extent to which he has been able to utilize these powers has varied dramatically throughout his appearances. Originally, both were limited by his need to restrain his techno-organic infection, and his powers were negligible compared to his more traditional fighting skills. However, following the subsidence of the infection, they gradually increased to the point where they were similar in magnitude to those of Nate Grey, to whom he is genetically identical. At their height, he demonstrated the ability to simultaneously levitate the floating city of Providence and combat the Silver Surfer.[39] Following that story, his powers were burnt out and he replaced both with technological substitutes. He later states that both his telepathy and telekinesis have faded to nothing.[40]

Cable has fought Wolverine to a stalemate,[41] and defeated Captain America in hand-to-hand combat and defeated Falcon, Red Hulk and Iron Man using both brute force and wit, all while Cable was in severe pain and hours away from dying from his techno-organic infection.[42]

When Professor Xavier's son Legion travels back in time to kill Magneto in the "Legion Quest" storyline, Beast notes that Cable possesses "latent time-travel abilities". With the assistance of Shi'ar technology, Professor Xavier "jump-starts" this ability while Jean Grey telekinetically holds Cable's body together, allowing Cable to send his consciousness into the past.[43]

In the Messiah War storyline, during the fight with his clone, Stryfe, Cable demonstrates the ability to hide others from Stryfe's mental view, implying that at least he retains some of his telepathic powers. He also still possesses some of his telekinesis, but he is using it solely to keep the techno-organic virus in his body at bay.[44][45]

His techno-organic body parts possess enhanced strength and durability, and his techno-organic left eye gives him enhanced eyesight, allowing him to see farther than a normal human and in the infrared spectrum. He is also able to interface his techno-organic body parts with machinery, using them to hack into computers, open electronic locks, and travel through time.

As of the end of Avengers: X-Sanction, Cable has apparently been fully cured of the techno-organic virus by the Phoenix Force (via Hope Summers), and appears to at least have his telepathy.[28] As a result, his cybernetic eye and arm have been restored to flesh and blood, although almost nonfunctional and atrophied, forcing Cable to wear an eyepatch (hiding a psimitar like implant) and use an enhanced brace, made by Forge and laden with special weaponry.[46] Due to a future Hope's tampering with his mind, he also gained the ability to see multiple possible future events before they unfolded.[47]

In Deadpool & Cable: Split Second, Cable had once again lost most of his powers, still retaining precognition. However, he regained them along with his cybernetics as a result of Deadpool repairing Cable's personal timeline.[48]

Cable also made use of a spear-like weapon called the Psi-Mitar, which was originally a long staff with a spear point on one end and a scythe blade on the other, used primarily by the Askani. It functions as a focus and amplifier for telepathic or telekinetic power, which it can project as powered blasts.

Other versions

In addition to his mainstream Marvel Universe incarnation, Cable has been depicted in other fictional universes.

In the Cable and Deadpool series storyline "Enema of State",[49] Deadpool and the mutants Cannonball and Siryn discover several alternate versions of Cable as they traverse several alternate universes via "Bodyslide", searching for Cable after he disappears. They remain in each separate universe for only a brief time, while Deadpool searches for the Cable from "his" timeline/universe. They first encounter an evil incarnation of Cable who has become one of the four Horsemen of Apocalypse, War.[50] Other versions include a guru-type Cable known as "Brother Nathan", on whose alternate earth all violence had been abolished,[51] a Phalanx-Cable, consumed by the techno-organic virus within his body,[51] and the Cable of the "House of M" reality, an infant in the care of a subdued Mister Sinister on a quiet Nebraska farm,[52] which Deadpool eventually realizes was his Cable. Deadpool seized the infant, took him back to his home universe, and cared for Nathan, who grew rapidly after having been injected with Deadpool's DNA.[53]

Cable appears in Marvel Zombies 2. Cable is uninfected, forced to work for the Acolytes in order for him to forever end the zombie virus. With the help of Forge, he constructs new artificial limbs for the Black Panther, after the zombie Henry Pym consumes the original ones.

In the setting of the Earth X storyline, the Techno-organic virus has overtaken Cable's body, who has become a blob of organic metal.[54]

In the Deadpool Pulp timeline, Cable is now General Cable, who, along with Stryfe (also a General) and J. Edgar Hoover, hires former CIA man Wade Wilson to get back a stolen nuclear briefcase.[55]

In the fantasy world depicted in the graphic novel Wolverine: Rahne of Terra, Cable's counterpart is a wizard called the Mage, who carried the Warlock Staff and a crossbow.[56]

In Ultimate X-Men, Cable is a future version of Wolverine who goes back to the past to capture Professor Xavier, returning with him to the future in order to train him for the coming battle with Apocalypse.[57] After Apocalypse's death, Cable fades out of existence.[58]

A two-part storyline in What If... asks, "What If Cable Destroyed the X-Men?" In this story, Cable clashes with Professor X and the X-Men over their beliefs and differences in methods. Ultimately, Cable leads a faction of mutants loyal to him and assassinates the Professor, Cyclops, and Jean Grey before embarking on a violent crusade. Cable is ultimately killed by Wolverine,[59] but his actions have already led to the further oppression of mutants. Magneto attempts to take control of America in the chaos, but is killed by a new model of plastic Sentinels, who decide that enslaving humanity is the best way to root out mutants. However, Wolverine assembles several surviving mutants to fight against the Sentinels as a new team of X-Men.[60]

X-Men Forever is an alternate universe written by Chris Claremont that takes place after the events of X-Men vol. 2, #3. In it, it is revealed that X-Factor's confrontation with Apocalypse ended differently — Nathan was saved, but aged somehow from a toddler into a child.[61] Nathan lives with his great-grandmother and grandfather in Alaska. An attack by mysterious agents causes Nathan to be moved to the protective custody of the Starjammers.[62] He is shown to possess telepathic powers. Cable appears in one panel of the series but no connection between Cable and Nathan is made.[63]

In other media

Television

Cable made eight appearances in X-Men: The Animated Series in the episodes "Slave Island", "The Cure", "Time Fugitives, Parts 1-2" and "Beyond Good and Evil, Parts 1-4" voiced by Lawrence Bayne in the English version and by Tesshō Genda in the Japanese dub. This version of Cable possessed his trademark metal arm but it is said to be a bionic construct rather than a result of the techno-organic virus. He is never shown to be telepathic, though he does use telekinesis in one episode. He is also depicted as coming from the year 3999, where he leads an army in a desperate war against the forces of the immortal villain Apocalypse.

Film

Promotional image of Josh Brolin as Cable for the film, Deadpool 2.

Video games

Influence

Artist Alex Ross drew upon his dislike of Liefeld's design of Cable when Ross designed the character Magog for the 1996 miniseries Kingdom Come. Following writer Mark Waid's instructions that the character's appearance be based on aspects of superhero design trends of the time that they disliked, Ross said of Cable, "That's a character that Mark Waid invented that was really just put to me like come up with the most God awful, Rob Liefeld sort of design that you can. What I was stealing from was – really only two key designs of Rob's – the design of Cable. I hated it. I felt like it looked like they just threw up everything on the character – the scars, the thing going on with his eye, the arm, and what's with all the guns? But the thing is, when I put those elements together with the helmet of Shatterstar – I think that was his name – well, the ram horns and the gold, suddenly it held together as one of the designs that I felt happiest with in the entire series."[69][70]

Collected editions

The stories have been collected in a number of trade paperbacks.

Cable volume 1 (1993 series)

Title (Trade Paperback/ Hardcover) Material collected Publication date ISBN
Cable Classic: Vol. 1 (TPB) New Mutants (Vol.1) #87; Cable: Blood and Metal; Cable (Vol.1) #1–4 March 2008 0-7851-3123-X
Cable Classic: Vol. 2 (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #5–14 August 2009 0-7851-3744-0
Cable Classic: Vol. 3 (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #15–20, Wolverine (Vol.2) #85 August 2012 0-7851-5972-X
Cable and X-Force Classic: Vol. 1 (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #21–28; X-Force (Vol.1) #44–48 May 2013 978-0-7851-8432-4
X-Man: The Man Who Fell to Earth (TPB) Cable (1993) #29–31; Excalibur (1988) #95 and X-Man #5–14 July 4, 2012 978-0785159810
X-Men: Prelude to Onslaught (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #32–33; X-Men (Vol.2) #50; Uncanny X-Men (Vol.1) #333; X-Man #15–17, April 2010 0-7851-4463-3
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol.1 (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #34; X-Force (vol. 1) #57; X-Men (Vol.2) #53–54; Uncanny X-Men (Vol.1) #334–335; and more. December 2007 0-7851-2823-9
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol.2 (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #35; X-Force (vol.1) #58; X-Men (vol.2) #55, Uncanny X-Men (Vol.1) #336; and more. June 2008 0-7851-2824-7
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol.4 (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #36; X-Men (Vol.2) #56–57; Uncanny X-Men (Vol.2) #337; Onslaught: Epilogue and more. January 2009 0-7851-2826-3
X-Men: Operation Zero Tolerance (HC) Cable (Vol.1) #45–47; X-Force (vol.1) #67–70; X-Men (vol.2) #65–70; and more. August 2012 0-7851-6240-2
Cable: The Hellfire Hunt (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #-1, 48–58; Cable & Machine Man Annual 1998; Machine Man & Bastion Annual 1998; Wolverine/Cable #1 November 2017 978-1-3029-0785-3
Deathlok: Rage Against The Machine (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #58–62; Uncanny X-Men (vol.1) #371; X-Men (vol.2) #91; X-Men Annual 99'; Deathlok (Vol.3) #1-11. February 2015 978-0-7851-9291-6
X-Men Vs. Apocalypse Vol.1: The Twelve (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #75–76; Uncanny X-Men (vol.1) #376–377; X-Men (Vol.2) #96–97; Wolverine (Vol.2) #146–147 March 2008 0-7851-2263-X
X-Men Vs. Apocalypse Vol.2: Ages of Apocalypse (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #77; Uncanny X-Men (vol.1) #378; X-Men (Vol.2) #98; The Search for Cyclops #1–4; and more. September 2008 0-7851-2264-8
X-Men: Powerless (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #78; X-Force (Vol.1) #101; Uncanny X-Men (vol.1) #379–380; X-Men (Vol.2) #99; and more. August 2010 0-7851-4677-6
X-Men: Dream's End (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #87; Uncanny X-Men (vol.1) #388–390; Bishop: The Last X-Man #16; X-Men (Vol.2) #108–110. December 2004 0-7851-1551-X
Cable: Shining Path (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #97–100 May 2002 0-7851-0909-9
Cable: The End (TPB) Cable (Vol.1) #101–107 November 2002 0-7851-0963-3

Cable mini-series

Title (Trade Paperback/ Hardcover) Material collected Publication date ISBN
The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix (TPB) The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix (1994) #1–4 January 1996 0-7851-0171-3
Askani'son (TPB) Askani'son (1996) #1–4 September 1997 0-7851-0565-4
X-Men: The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix (1994) #1–4, Askani'son (1996) #1–4,
Phoenix #1-3, X-Men Books of Askani, Material from the Marvel Valentine's Day Special
2014 0785188339
X-Force and Cable: Legend Returns (TPB) X-Force (Vol.2, 2005) #1–6 April 2005 0-7851-1429-7

Cable volume 2 (2008 series)

Title (Trade Paperback/ Hardcover) Material collected Publication date ISBN
Cable Vol. 1: Messiah War Cable (Vol.2) #1–5 January 2009 0-7851-3226-0 (hardcover); 0-7851-2973-1 (softcover)
Cable Vol. 2: Waiting for the End of the World Cable (Vol.2) #6–10; King-Sized Cable June 2009 0-7851-3391-7 (hardcover); 0-7851-2973-1 (softcover)
X-Force/Cable: Messiah War Cable (vol. 2) #11–15; Messiah War one-shot; X-Force (Vol.3) #14–16; X-Men: The Times and Life of Lucas Bishop #1–3; X-Men: Future History – The Messiah War Sourcebook August 2009 0-7851-3157-4 (hardcover); 0-7851-3173-6 (softcover)
Cable Vol. 3: Stranded Cable (vol. 2) #16–20 February 2010 0-7851-4241-X (hardcover); 0-7851-4167-7 (softcover)
Cable Vol.4: Homecoming Cable (vol. 2) #21–25; X-Men: Hope #1 November 2010 978-0-7851-4509-7 (hardcover); 978-0-7851-4168-6 (softcover)
Avengers: X-Sanctions Avengers: X-Sanctions #1–4 December 2012 0-7851-5863-4

Cable and X-Force (2013 series)

Title (Trade Paperback/ Hardcover) Material collected Publication date ISBN
Cable and X-Force Vol.1: Wanted (TPB) Cable and X-Force (Vol.1) #1–5, Marvel Now! Point One (X-Force story) May 2013 0-7851-6690-4
Cable and X-Force Vol.2: Dead or Alive (TPB) Cable and X-Force (Vol.1) #6–9 November 2013 0-7851-6691-2

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