This post contains potential spoilers for X-Men ’97 season 2.

You know Wolverine. He’s the mutant named Logan, whose rapid healing factor drew a secret Canadian program to transform him into a super-soldier by grafting unbreakable adamantium metal onto his skeleton, including the claws that pop from his fists. He’s the most popular X-Man, the best anti-hero in the Marvel bullpen. He’s the best at what he does, and what he does isn’t very nice. And he’s been part of some really weird stories.

If a new Wolverine Funko Pop is any indication, one of those stories will come to life in animation for season 2 of X-Men ’97. Amongst the figures shown in the latest batch of leaks, we find one labeled, “Wolverine (Wasteland).” At first glance, the figure doesn’t look that different from the standard Wolverine design: he’s wearing yellow and blue spandex, a mask covers the top part of his face, and his claws are popped. But it’s only when one notices his sharp teeth, the ragged hood he’s using for his mask, and the jagged bone claws coming from his fist that comic book fans realize that this isn’t the Wolverine we know. This is the savage Wolverine from the late ’90s, the Wolverine who doesn’t have a nose.

To understand how that Wolverine came to be, we need only look at a story beat that X-Men ’97 adapted in season 1. At the end of the first season, when the massacre on Genosha ended Magneto’s brief tenure fighting alongside the X-Men, the Master of Magnetism used his powers to pull the adamantium off Wolverine’s bones and out of his body.

The scene comes directly from the pages of 1993’s X-Men #25, the climax of the Fatal Attractions storyline. The moment forever changed Wolverine, for several reasons. First, it changed a key part of Logan’s backstory, revealing that his claws were bone extensions of his skeleton and predated the adamantium transfusion. In his earliest X-Men adventures, Wolverine described his claws as part of the gloves that he wore. Later, the claws were retconned to be added to his body when Department H of the Canadian government turned him into a super-soldier as part of the Weapon X program. X-Men #25 established that Logan has had claws ever since his mutant ability manifested when he was an adolescent.

More importantly, the storyline forced Wolverine to face his greatest fear. From his first appearance in 1974’s Incredible Hulk #180 and #181, Wolverine has been defined by his internal struggle, the feeling that his humanity has been forever overwhelmed by his bestial impulses. Wolverine found redemption as part of the X-Men, winning fights against villains not because he’s stronger or smarter or even a better fighter, but because his healing factor allowed him to stay in the fight longer than anyone else.

At first, the loss of his adamantium diminished his healing factor, leaving him more vulnerable to attack. For the first time in decades, Wolverine had to be judicious in his battles; he couldn’t just slash his way through baddies. But then, his healing factor not only recovered, but kicked into overdrive, and that’s where things get strange.

We learn that his healing factor had been largely used to keep the adamantium from poisoning him. But once Magneto pulled the adamantium out, his healing factor went into overdrive, mutating Wolverine further. Over the next several years of X-Men and Wolverine comics, Logan got meaner, hairier, and even less coherent. He started devolving into an animal and the stories at the time suggested that writers would finally embrace a long-rumored idea that Logan was originally imagined to be an actual Wolverine who mutated into a human. As he became more animalistic, Wolverine eventually lost his nose, with a flat snout where his sniffer once was.

As the above synopsis indicates, Wolverine’s devolution comes during a bad time for X-Men comics. Across his epic run that lasted from 1975 to 1991, Chris Claremont transformed the X-Men from C-listers into the best-selling comic on the racks. That popularity hit the mainstream with the arrival of the original X-Men animated series in 1993. But with Claremont off the franchise, editors desperate to keep the success going, and Marvel relying on its mutants to stave off its upcoming bankruptcy, X-Men comics were a cavalcade of bad ideas during the ’90s, even by the standards of the decade.

Yet, as goofy as the idea was, the noseless, animal Wolverine did speak to the character’s central question, that tension between man and beast. Given the excellent track-record set by the first season of X-Men ’97, we’re certain that the Funko figure points to not a retread of a bad idea. Rather, X-Men ’97 may be able to bring out the best in the noseless Wolverine story, exploring its themes without sacrificing any of the silliness.

Because if there’s one thing we know about Wolverine, it’s that he can mutate, adapting to any situation and ensuring that he remains the best at what he does, even if what he does happens without a nose.

X-Men ’97 season 2 will stream on Disney+ in mid-2026.

The post X-Men ’97 Toy Leak Teases the Weirdest Wolverine Story appeared first on Den of Geek.

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