![]() ![]() To contain the star’s energy and gravitational pull, Xorn wore a helmet mask that conveniently hid his face. ![]() Xorn’s main power was purportedly having a miniature star for a brain. ![]() Magneto dropped another clue when the X-Men came to rescue Xorn, claiming “I could have built Heaven on Earth, if only they’d let me,” a reference to his recent attempt to expand his mutant haven Genosha by waging war on humankind in the storyline “Eve of Destruction.” Meanwhile, his prison, Feng Tu, as revealed in Morrison and Phil Jiminez's New X-Men #146, was a false prison he’d built solely to trick the X-Men. The keys to this deception were made of partly oxidized metal, which Magneto could have easily manipulated to contain false information by covering them with incredibly small Nano-Sentinels he’d acquired (or created) from the Genosha attack that could affect Emma’s brain. Emma was instead immediately flooded with mental images of Xorn’s supposed origin. ![]() Yet hints suggesting otherwise began early in Xorn’s debut issue, namely when Emma Frost tried learning about Xorn by telepathically examining the keys to his prison restraints. Magneto was believed killed when Cassandra Nova’s Wild Sentinels attacked Genosha in Morrison and Frank Quitely's New X-Men #114. ![]()
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