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Ship

Ship

"Ship" was a sentient monolith left behind by the Celestials to monitor the progress of the life on Earth. It was later taken over by Apocalypse and liberated by X-Factor who used it as their headquarters.

Name:
Ship
Publisher:
Real name:
Ship
Aliases:
  • Professor
  • Prosh
  • Graymalkin
Birth date:
None
Gender:
Male
Powers:
  • Adaptive
  • Electronic Disruption
  • Energy Absorption
  • Energy Manipulation
  • Gadgets
  • Holographic Projection
  • Intellect
  • Matter Absorption
  • Radar Sense
  • Shape Shifter
  • Siphon Lifeforce
  • Size Manipulation
  • Technopathy
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Origin

The Celestials created Ship with the idea of collecting information and specimens who they could later tamper with. In one of it's missions it ended up in Earth and didn’t leave. The immortal mutant Saul found it but was unable to operate or enter it. As time passed another mutant found his way to Ship, this one being Apocalypse who tried to kill Saul but was unable to, because he was a fellow external, a member of a class of pseudo-immortal mutants. As Apocalypse enters Ship he made it his personal vessel, as it had perfect cloaking devices, and using his great knowledge of Celestial mechanics, he reprograms Ship to serve him.

Creation

Ship was created by Walter and Louise Simonson and first appeared in X-Factor 15 (1987).

Character Evolution

Ship was first introduced as a sentient spaceship co-opted by Apocalypse. He was then turned by X-Factor and acted as their base/vessel. When apocalypse infected Nathan Summers with the techno-organic virus, Ship accompanied Nathan (in his chest) to the future and acted as a guide. Back in the present, Ship, now called Professor, was the central core of Cable's space base, Graymalkin. He was then the network in the X-Force base in Arizona. After a Phalanx tried to absorb the information in the bunker, the Phalanx's body wasn't able to contain the mass of information and Ship was able to transfer his consciousness into the body. He then took to the stars.

Issues

April 1987

June 1987

July 1987

August 1987

October 1987

November 1987

December 1987

January 1988

February 1988

March 1988

April 1988

May 1988

June 1988

July 1988

August 1988

September 1988

October 1988

November 1988

March 1989

April 1989

May 1989

June 1989

Volumes

1964

1970

1981

1982

1983

1984

1985

1986

1987

1988

1989

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

2001

2004

2008

2009

2010

Authors

Friends

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Teams

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