#doctor aphra (2020)
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DOCTOR APHRA #40
#yael is reading star wars#oh i loved it so muchhhhh#can't wait to see her again in post-rotj comics#doctor aphra 2020
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Luke Skywalker canonically bound and gagged
Got to this bit and immediately thought lol some people will be into this and I bet a lot of them don't read the comics
#star wars#star wars comics#luke skywalker#doctor aphra#doctor aphra (2020)#dinluke#luke skywalker is a twink#and he really looks like it in this#sub luke skywalker#look a reference for your smutty fanart
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This month’s Doctor Aphra has an amazing cover! I’d kill for a poster-sized print.
#Star Wars#Doctor Aphra#Rachael Stott#Chelli Lona Aphra#Magna Tolvan#Comic books#Star Wars Doctor Aphra 2020#Doctor Aphra 031
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Doctor Aphra reading guide 2025
we are nearing 10 years of having our favorite doctor in star wars! before A New Legacy comes out in a couple weeks with anniversary stories featuring Aphra, let's run down all her many many comics :)
(there are a few guides online, but mostly outdated or don't include everything i feel they should)
(includes Aphra's comics storyline. issues of other comics that feature Aphra as a cameo but don't really fit anywhere into her story are summed up at the end, same with non-comic material.)
Vader - Darth Vader (2015) issues 1-6
Shadows and Secrets - DV issues 7-12
Vader Down - Vader Down one-shot -> DV 13 -> Star Wars (2015) 13 -> DV 14 -> SW 14 -> DV 15
Rebel Jail - Star Wars (2015) issues 16-19
(optional) The Shu-Torun War - DV issues 16-19
End of Games - DV issues 20-25
Aphra - Doctor Aphra (2016) issues 1-6
The Screaming Citadel - The Screaming Citadel one-shot -> SW 31 -> DA 7 -> SW 32 -> DA 8
The Enormous Profit - Doctor Aphra Annual 1, DA issues 9-13
Remastered - DA issues 14-19
The Catastrophe Con - DA issues 20-25
Worst Among Equals - DA issues 26-31, Doctor Aphra Annual 2
Unspeakable Rebel Superweapon - DA issues 32-36
Rogue's End - DA issues 37-40, DA Annual 3, The Empire Ascendant one-shot
Fortune and Fate - Doctor Aphra (2020) issues 1-5
The Engine Job - DA issues 6-9
War of the Bounty Hunters - War of the Bounty Hunters 1 -> DA issues 10-11 -> WotBH 2 -> DA 12 -> WotBH 3 -> DA 13 -> WotBH 4 -> DA 14-15 -> WotBH 5
Crimson Reign - DA issues 16-21
The Spark Eternal - DA issues 22-25
Ascendant - DA issue 26 -> Revelations (2022) -> DA issues 27-29 -> Hidden Empire 5 -> DA issues 30-31
Ripple Effect - DA issues 32-34
Dark Droids - DA issues 35-40, Tall Tales story in Revelations (2023)
(War of the Bounty Hunters, Crimson Reign, Hidden Empire and Dark Droids are all bigger crossover events as well, which can optionally be read in their entirety. all content relevant to Aphra is included here.)
(for big-picture timeline purposes: arcs 1-14 take place between A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back; arcs 15-22 between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi.)
additional Aphra-featuring issues outside this timeline:
flashbacks in Galaxy's Edge issues 3-5, set sometime between Vader and Remastered.
Bounty Hunters (2020) issue 1, set sometime between Rogue's End and War of the Bounty Hunters, probably around Fortune and Fate. conflicts with pre-established character dynamics a bit.
Darth Vader (2020) issues 35-36, set sometime between Ascendant and Dark Droids.
Dark Droids issue 5, difficult to reconcile with the rest of the Dark Droids Aphra arc, but taking place during it.
Battle of Jakku: Republic Under Siege issues 1-2, set after Return of the Jedi and thus after everything in this guide.
extremely minor cameos and mentions in other comics:
multiple flashbacks in Sana Starros miniseries (issues 1, 2, and 5)
mention in Star Wars (2015) issue 61
non-comic media starring Aphra (recommended for sure but outside this reading guide):
The Trigger - short story from the anthology From a Certain Point of View (2017). takes place shortly before Vader.
Doctor Aphra audio drama and/or its script (2020) - adapts the first six arcs of this guide, with additional material, including backstory aspects that are later incorporated into Aphra's comics.
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Darth Vader (2020) by Greg Pak
Background
The three main writers of the Darth Vader ongoing comics (ie not a miniseries) at Marvel were Kieron Gillen (2015, 25 issues), Charles Soule (2017, 25 issues), and Greg Pak (2020, 50 issues). Each writer covered a different milieu of genre trappings, time periods, supporting casts, and writing styles.
Gillen's run is about Vader following the events of Episode IV: A New Hope, where he's been knocked down a peg after losing the Battle of Yavin IV and the Death Star. In his pursuit of the X-Wing pilot who destroyed the battle station he uncovers new things about his past, changing the narrative that he tells himself. There's a bit of Imperial military intrigue with Tagge, Inspector Thanoth, and Dr Cylo IV, and a little bit of crossover with the flagship Star Wars comic title written by Jason Aaron. It also got a Gillen-written spin off with the character Doctor Aphra, who continued to support her own solo titles from 2016-2024.
Soule's run was set immediately after the events of Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, and was a very introspective story where Vader learned to connect his past as Anakin Skywalker with his future as Vader. Flashbacks to scenes from the prequels were cut in, alongside red-colored narration boxes with dramatic prose and darkly re-contextualized quotes from the films. It's a story largely about Anakin building himself up through self-narration.
Greg Pak's Darth Vader
Greg Pak's 2020-2024 run of Darth Vader, set after Episode V: The Empire Strikes back, used double the issues of each individual previous series to cover similar content in wholly different, re-inventive, and additive ways. The Imperial Court element is more present than ever with Sly Moore, Sabe, Mas Amedda, Qi'ra, Palpatine, various Imperial governors, administrators, and military officers double and triple-crossing one another. This run had even more crossover than Gillen/Aaron, with substantial storylines tying into the War of the Bounty Hunters, Crimson Reign, Hidden Empire, and Dark Droids. This is perhaps the closest thing to a book about political intrigue that Marvel Star Wars has had, each event incorporating existing supporting characters in with the line-wide events. "Let the past die, kill it if you have to": Darth Vader and Nostalgia
Where the book really shines is when it plays in a similar space to Charles Soule's run. Much like Soule frequently flashbacked to iconic prequel scenes, Pak has 5 movies' worth of scenes to pull from, and is not shy with reusing the trope-- red-colored narration boxes and all. How Darth Vader structures his own narrative is something this book is extremely concerned with. Nearly every dramatic and/or violent action Vader takes is intercut with a parallel action or quote. Throughout this run, Darth Vader is a perennial loser, regularly getting blasted, dismembered, knocked out, captured, controlled, or outwitted. When he succeeds, the book is unafraid to make him an absolute badass, immediately turning to classic Anakin cockiness and braggadocio. He fails because he is unable to do anything without lingering on a very narrow set of moments in his life. The 5 movies' worth of events are so pivotal to him, that he is unable to do anything but call back to them.
The trajectory of Darth Vader from III->IV is simultaneously a fall from grace and the shaping of grim tyranny: a space Charles Soule effectively plays in. IV->V is about rising from defeat and coming back triumphantly. Kieron Gillen covers that quite clearly. V->VI demonstrates a Vader who goes from victorious to submissive and meek by the time of the latter film. His ascendance only comes when he is willing to move forward and change who he is, rather than wallowing in his misery, rather than letting himself be poisoned by toxic nostalgia.
Greg Pak's run on Darth Vader is simultaneously a thrilling tale of political intrigue, as well as a roadmap for the franchise itself. The past matters, but it cannot be the only foundation upon which future stories are built upon.
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Hello There Readers,
For the third June in a row, our theme is PRIDE! Our options for novels and comics will all feature characters who happen to be members of the LGBTQIA+ community.
The novel and comic polls are now live in our Discord Server, and you have until 10pm GMT (5pm EST, 2pm PST) on May 21st to vote for what books we'll be reading together. Our options are listed below.
NOVELS
1. The Last of the Jedi: The Desperate Mission by Jude Watson 2. Galaxy's Edge: Black Spire by Delilah S. Dawson 3. Lords of the Sith by Paul S. Kemp
COMICS
1. The High Republic Adventures (2024) 2. Doctor Aphra (2020) 3. Lando (2015)
If you would like join the book club, send us an ask & the admins will give you an invite! We look forward to reading with you!
May the Force Be With You, - Star Wars Book Club
#star wars book club#star wars discord server#star wars novels#star wars comics#the high republic#star wars legends#expanded universe#doctor aphra#announcements#announcement#ours#starwarsbookclub#swbc
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Hello,
I got some Star Wars comics which has some side characters called Thrawn and Doctor Aphra. They were interesting.
Now I'm interested to find out more about them. But tbh I mostly read stuff about Vader and/or Obi-wan and which are 'canon'.
So my question, would you say these characters have good stand-alone stories? Are they worth a look? And which story/comic do you think should I read first?
oooh great question!! i've read and enjoyed the hell out of both doctor aphra comic runs, the gillen/spurrier one in 2016 and the 2020 wong one. she's such fun as a side character, and i think both her standalone series are well worth reading too!! iirc you can go straight from the end of the 2015 darth vader series straight into the 2016 aphra one and it makes sense!
thrawn has a lot of great material out there, several trilogies of books and tv appearances in the later seasons of rebels and the ahsoka show. there's also a 2018 thrawn comic series which i've heard great things about (edit: it's an adaptation of the novels fwiw), but have not yet read. i'd say watching rebels or picking up one of zahn's books is a good way to get started with him, i think the 2017 book called thrawn is the start for the new canon. thrawn: alliances (the second book in the imperial trilogy after thrawn) also has him interacting with both anakin and vader, split between parallel narratives of past and present, so you have that to look forward to if you like vader stories!
#i love both those characters so much#aphra is so chaotic and clever#thrawn's menacing intelligence is delicious#great choices honestly#sw#sw books#the thrawn series from the 90s is good too idk if you want EU recs
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Spirit World #3 delves into something I'd never thought ever be unearthed again regarding Cass, but here we are. So finally at long last (sorry for the delay) is my thoughts on the issue.
I'll start with the negatives I had with the issue. Just two. The co-lead for the series Xanthe, kind of disappears after the opening and ending part of the issue.
They do a cool thing and at the end lead the investigation to the mystery antagonist of the series. But other than that they kind of disappear to the background allowing Cass and the other characters to take center stage.
It's just two issues prior and it feels like we hit a road bump with the character this issue. I doubt it'll continue but just I wanted to know more about Xanthe this issue is all.
In a way, I kind of was hoping for a mirror on how Xanthe dealt with death and related it to Cass's situation. There's still a high probability of this but was curious why it wasn't laid further this issue. But I digress A LOT occurred in this issue.
The other is a bit of a nitpick and me being a fan of the continuity kept. But... when Shen makes their proposal to Cass on memories we get a clear vantage on the memories of WHOM Cass values. A certain blonde Batgirl is front and center.
However, of note given what is brought up this issue and what isn't. You get the feeling that DC is moving in the direction of giving Cass her Pre-New 52 origin but Steph still has hers (and her costume to boot basically).
I know I'm an Orphan hater but there's a lot of burial going on with the identity. I get it. But on the other hand it did give us some good relationships and character progression for Cass that I did enjoy.
But Duke was a focal point for Cass for quite a while. Providing some of the best Bat-Family moments of 2018-early 2020 when we weren't getting any.
Same for Basil who was at the heart of WHY Cass currently dives deep into her battle of overcoming her reading disorder.
It just feels like DC is gonna sweep these characters and these moments under a rug and pretend they never occurred. But when you have Steph having her newer origin it just makes taking away that portion (Harper was key in hers).
But I digress writer Alyssa Wong has given an out for a future writers (or themself to acknowledge these moments). Namely, the sacrifice Cass gives to allow Shen to give her answers.
Shen takes away a memory or more from Cass. The question I wonder is which? I hope the book doesn't answer the loss (or if it does just bridge it to Cass's memory loss for what happened to the OTHER bit that's reopened this issue).
Just not the Basil portion. I want tears for that reunion matchup (also how have we not gotten that?!). James Tynion IV left whomever a WHOPPER of an emotional rollercoaster and it just boggles me how DC hasn't given any writer clearance to tackle that (more so Wong).
I want my heart ripped out, please. Wong does that always with their Doctor Aphra run (but then that's the nature of Aphra). Like I feel they'd slay something like this HARD. Anyway... getting off tangent.
As I said, while this door closes, a door I never thought possible is reopened this issue. I.e. Wong addresses Cassandra's death in Batgirl Vol. 1 #72.
MAN do I have questions about what is brought up this issue. The fact that artist Haining studied this particular issue is because he got the freaking damage Cass received from Mad Dog down to the wound that killed her.
He even PERFECTLY replicated that crazy costume Lady Shiva wore in #73 even DOWN to her wearing the utility belt of her daughter.
Literally THE BELT DETAIL. The modified Lazarus Pit (Nyssa used one that could be reused). Even the HOOK that is used by Cass to impale her mom is there.
THE DETAILS!!! 🤤🤤🤤🤤
IT’S ALL THERE!!!
So us long-time Cass fans/readers know SOMETHING is up as Shiva never murdered Cass (this time). The only gun Shiva used was to grapple net her daughter and calm her down from the Pit's madness.
Now my question is this mixed memory due to Shen? Due to the comic's antagonist? Or due the modified Laz Pit?
I have SOOOOO many questions.
However, this is the FIRST TIME a DC Comic fully showed an issue of Batgirl Vol. 1 (Detective Comics #980 which was used to fully showcase why there were flaws with the Orphan identity). I'm almost surprised an editor's note wasn't used. But then again... maybe that's Wong and the editors using people like me and other fans to be like, "WHAT'S GOING ON HERE?!"
Doing their job in raising an alarm bell but also showing newbies WHERE this all occurs (also a nicely paper-quality reprint of this run be helpful).
Plus there are some other quality Cass moments also in this issue that are glorious (Cass being so selfless and a bit of sass).
Other bits I did enjoy about this issue was the people of Spirit World getting their moment. Like you feel a weight when the antagonist of the series shows up.
And OH BOY, let's talk about that nightmare fuel design Haining gave them. This thing is just so freaking detailed, and horrifying, yet also makes me want to scream lowly, "Mommy take me."
I'm not gonna spoil that reveal. You're just gonna have to buy the issue yourself.
However, I am enjoying the stuff Shen represents as a memory broker. Taking and giving memories back to spirits. Not to mention... THEY'RE JUST SO CUTE!!
So even with the negatives I had with the issue. I still highly enjoyed this issue mainly because it awakened the continuity beast within me and acknowledged Batgirl Vol. 1 and made me look at EVERY detail.
I love that the characters are dictating the plot and not the plot just doing things. Everything is going at a nice pace (even if Xanthe suffered this issue in getting more stuff).
I am loving the additions Wong is adding to the lore of Cass and I am VERY curious about what they're going to do next.
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"I want you to be better, but I can't make you that person."
Doctor Aphra (2020) #31
#absolutely crazy. i love it 👍#absolutely need to read the sana comic after this btw#also sooooo excited to see what terrible decisions aphra will make in response to this#bc lets be so real we all know whats coming#way too many emotions for aphra she needs to go destroy her life or commit war crimes or whatever she usually does in this scenario#the war crimes days are behind her though#commit regular crimes i suppose. like more than usual? idk. very pumped#aphra no 31 issue of all time#sana starros#doctor aphra#chelli lona aphra#sw comics#star wars comics#star wars#panelposting#the subsequent love confession and breakup... iconic#also them literally being ex girlfriends is sooooo shdishshss#i mean thats all the women aphra talk to her number of exes is actually insane but like. ahdjahdshsjshc still#also also womp rat of a person is soooo <333333#likes yes got it in 1 she sucks soooooooo bad. and yet i love her.#the brainrot is very much active hehe#blah
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Comic books??1?1
Hey I really love your posts, I am a Luke skywalker fan myself. I was wondering where too start with starwars comic books? Which ones are your favorite, which ones you recommend? And where too read said comics, keep up the amazing posts ^_^
Thank you! If you're a luke fan, the screaming citadel arc is a must - you can google the reading order but it's Star Wars: The Screaming Citadel - Star Wars (2015) #31 - Doctor Aphra #7 - Star Wars #32 - Doctor Aphra #8. Shattered empire is also a great comic, and the showdown on smuggler's moon arc (star wars 2015 #8- 12) has some awesome art! Or you can just read the star wars (2015) and star wars (2020) from the start - it's worth a read! And if you want legends stuff, I found dark empire to be charming.
As for where to read them... you can go to an official site such as marvel unlimited or get an offline book but you should totally not use a pirating site such as this one, nope, I'm just telling you this so you can avoid em
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Other artists with unusual style. Part 2
Kei Zama:
Kei Zama (座間 慧 Zama Kei) is a Japanese comic artist and metalhead. After discovering Last Stand of the Wreckers, they fell hard for Transformers and started hunting down every Western comic they could, with Geoff Senior and Derek Yaniger being faves and influences for their "powerful and aggressive" styles.
Starting as a regular cover artist for IDW Publishing, they became the regular artist on Optimus Prime in late 2016.
As well as Transformers, they've drawn for their fan-fave 2000 AD: starting with those other war robots, ABC Warriors, for a 2017 Free Comic Book Day special. They were unsure about doing it at the same time as starting their ongoing Optimus Prime gig but John Barber, their co-creator, talked them into it.
Kei Zama is a Japanese comic book artist who has worked on several Star Wars projects for Marvel Comics as an illustrator and cover artist, including War of the Bounty Hunters – 4-LOM & Zuckuss 1, Life Day 1, and Doctor Aphra (2020) 21. They enjoy the prequel trilogy films and appreciated the experience of drawing characters from the 1999 prequel trilogy film Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace for the Pride Month variant cover of Darth Vader (2020) 24.
My opinions for this artist, they have made lot of details when they are making transformers comics as which they've drawn for their fan-fave 2000 AD which is starting with those other war robots aka Cybertrons and Decepticons.
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Ben Templesmith:
Ben Templesmith is an Australian comic book artist best known for his work in the American comic book industry, most notably the Image Comics series Fell, with writer Warren Ellis, and IDW's 30 Days of Night with writer Steve Niles, which was adapted into a motion picture of the same name.
Templesmith produced his first commercial American comics work in 2001, providing the art for Todd McFarlane Productions' Hellspawn, which was published by Image Comics. He has gone on to create his own original works as well as contribute to many licensed properties at various publishers, most notably IDW Publishing, with which he had an exclusive agreement through most of 2008 and part of 2009 before returning to being a freelancer.
Original works Templesmith has produced include the miniseries Welcome to Hoxford, the New York Times best-selling Wormwood: Gentleman Corpse Tommyrot: The Art of Ben Templesmith, Conluvio and Choker at Image Comics with writer Ben McCool. He also provided a number of covers for the Oni Press series Wasteland.
In April 2012, DC Entertainment announced that Templesmith would be one of the artists illustrating a new digital Batman series with stories set outside regular DC continuity.
My opinions for this artist, that his art works have like different emotions but he want it to be in the dark theme scene on the comic as it very unusual for it in the comic itself as it is like explaining the emotions with colours but in dark theme style.
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Joëlle Jones:
Joëlle Jones is an American comic book artist and writer, best known for her work on Lady Killer, a series published in 2015–2017 by Dark Horse Comics, for her cover work on various Marvel Comics series, and for her work writing and illustrating DC Comics series including Batman and Catwoman.
Joëlle Jones is an Eisner nominated artist currently living and working in Los Angeles, CA. Since attending PNCA in Portland, OR, she has contributed to a wide range of projects and has most recently has worked on Batman for DC comics. She also wrote and drew the series, Lady Killer, published by Dark Horse comics. Jones has also provided the art for fashion designer Prada, and various projects for Marvel, Boom, Vertigo, Oni Press and The New York Times. Joëlle currently has projects with DC comics as well as continuing her Series Lady Killer.
My opinions for this artist, that her art works has very complexing colours on her work as she works on the details little by little as she had made positive spaces and aswell negative spaces to show what specific parts that our attention should be.
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I have Asajj Ventress syndrome it's when I read Doctor Aphra (2020) vol. 1 and there's a guy named Venters and I lose my mind.
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(ongoing) list of sapphic comic characters !
includes real and codenames (sorted by surnames, if applicable, alphabetically), sexuality (if specifically confirmed), link to tag (if i have one), and some further information if i know of any i want to include
if anything is incorrect, or you just know of something to be added, please let me know! preferably by asks, anon is on
DC Comics
Miscellaneous
Eva | Radiant Pink
from the massive-verse comics released by image comics
Jennika (Bisexual)
originated from the ongoing teenage mutant ninja turtles comics released by idw publishing
Velma Dinkley (Lesbian)
official scooby-doo comics are currently being released by dc comics
Kelly Pandit
from the massive-verse comics released by image comics
Roxie Richter
from scott pilgrim, released by oni press
Marvel Comics
Aneka
tag
her and ayo appear in black panther: world of wakanda, a comic that won the 2018 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Doctor Aphra
tag
marvel publishes the official star wars comics
Ayo
tag
her and aneka appear in black panther: world of wakanda, a comic that won the 2018 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Loki (Bisexual)
also canonically nonbinary
Rūna | Valkyrie
tag
appears in avengers unlimited infinity comic — full (earth-616) appearance list here
Sera
tag
also canonically a trans woman
an important character in angela: queen of hel, which was nominated for the 2016 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Xavin
tag
Irene Adler | Destiny
tag
appears in immortal x-men (2022) — full (earth-616) appearance list here
in a relationship with raven darkhölme
a main character in immortal x-men alongside mystique, which was nominated for the 2023 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Rikki Barnes
Betsy Braddock | Psylocke | Captain Britain
tag
America Chavez (Lesbian)
tag
a main character in young avengers (2013), which won the 2014 glaad media award for outstanding comic book, four years before her solo was nominated in 2018
Raven Darkhölme | Mystique
tag
appears in immortal x-men (2022) — full (earth-616) appearance list here
in a relationship with irene adler
a main character in immortal x-men alongside destiny, which was nominated for the 2023 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Karolina Dean (Lesbian)
tag
appears in marvel's voices: pride (2021) — full (earth-616) appearance list here
in a relationship with nico minoru
a main character in runaways (2017) alongside nico minoru, which was nominated for the 2019 and 2020 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Gabrielle Diwa | Galura (Lesbian)
tag
appears in love unlimited infinity comic, new mutants: lethal legion — full (earth-616) appearance list here
in a relationship with xuân cao manh
a supporting character in vita ayla's run of new mutants (2019), nominated for the glaad media award for outstanding comic book in 2023
Heather Douglas | Moondragon
tag
appears in guardians of the galaxy (2020) — full (earth-616) appearance list here + here
in a relationship with phyla-vell
a part of the team with phyla-vell in guardians of the galaxy (2020), which was nominated in 2021 and 2022 for the glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Felicia Hardy | Black Cat (Bisexual)
tag
Martha Johansson
tag
appears in new mutants: lethal legion — full (earth-616) appearance list here
Cessily Kincaid | Mercury
tag
Xuân Cao Manh | Karma (Lesbian)
tag
appears in love unlimited infinity comic, new mutants: lethal legion — full (earth-616) appearance list here
in a relationship with gabrielle diwa
a main character in marjorie liu's run of astonishing x-men (2004) which was nominated for the 2013 glaad media award for outstanding comic book as well as being a main character in vita ayla's run of new mutants (2019), nominated in 2023
Nico Minoru (Bisexual)
tag
appears in marvel's voices: pride (2021) — full (earth-616) appearance list here
in a relationship with karolina dean
a main character in runaways (2017) alongside karolina dean, which was nominated for the 2019 and 2020 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Aldrif Odinsdottir | Angela
tag
her solo comic angela: queen of hel was nominated for the 2016 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Ellie Phimister | Negasonic Teenage Warhead
tag
Julie Power
tag
Shela Sexton | Escapade
tag
appears in new mutants: lethal legion — full (earth-616) appearance list here
also canonically a trans woman
the main character of her co-creator charlie jane ander's ending run of new mutants (2019), which was nominated for the 2023 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Rachel Summers | Phoenix | Askani
tag
a team member in x-factor (2020), which was nominated for the 2021 glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Heather Tucker | Tempo (Lesbian)
tag
Phyla-Vell (Lesbian)
tag
appears in guardians of the galaxy (2020) — full (earth-18897) appearance list here
in a relationship with heather douglas
a part of the team with heather douglas in guardians of the galaxy (2020), which was nominated in 2021 and 2022 for the glaad media award for outstanding comic book
Viv Vision (Lesbian)
tag
Roxanne Washington | Bling!
tag
Ramone Watts
tag
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Star Wars Doctor Aphra Omnibus V1 Collects Doctor Aphra Annual (2017) 1-3; Darth Vader (2015) 3-4, 8 21, 25; Star Wars (2015) 13, 19 31-32; Star Wars: The Screaming Citadel (2017) 1; material from Star Wars: Empire Ascendant (2020) 1.
Meet the galaxy's most daring rogue archaeologist as she dances between the dark side and the light! Doctor Chelli Aphra's unique skills made her of interest to none other than Darth Vader - but things went sour, and now she's trying to keep a low profile. Which is easier said than done, since she's traveling with two sociopathic murder-droids and a Wookie bounty hunter! But as Aphra's archaeological escapades get more dangerous, she soon finds herself over her head. Will a growing romance with a strict Imperial officer redeem her - or destroy them both? Adventure, excitement and terror await!
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MUUN SPOTTED!!!! (Doctor Aphra (2020) Issue #9)
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📖: Doctor Aphra #31 - 2020
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