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Sentinel (comics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mutant-hunting robot in Marvel Comics
For the comic book, seeSentinel (comic book). For the DC Comics superhero, seeAlan Scott. For the fictional imprint label, seeSentinel Comics.
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Sentinels
Three large purple and gray robots, with lights on their chests and their fingertips
The Sentinels.
Art byAlex Ross.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe X-Men #14 (Nov. 1965)[1]
Created byStan Lee
Jack Kirby
In-story information
Base(s)Sentinel Headquarters,New York
Member(s)Sentinel SquadOffice of National Emergency
Nimrod
Master Mold
Bastion
Prime Sentinels
Wild Sentinels

TheSentinels are a group ofmutant-huntingrobots appearing inAmerican comic books published byMarvel Comics. They are typically depicted asantagonists to theX-Men.

The Sentinels played a large role in severalX-Men animated series, and have been featured in severalX-Menvideo games. The Sentinels are featured prominently in the 2014 filmX-Men: Days of Future Past, and made brief appearances in the 2006 filmX-Men: The Last Stand and the 2016 filmX-Men: Apocalypse. In 2009, The Sentinels were ranked inIGN as the 38th Greatest Comic Book Villain of All Time.[2]

Publication history

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Sentinels' debut inThe X-Men #14 (November 1965). Art byJack Kirby.

Created byStan Lee andJack Kirby, they first appeared inThe X-Men #14 (Nov. 1965).[3]

Sentinels are programmed to locatemutants and capture or kill them. Though several types of Sentinels have been introduced, the typical Sentinel is threestories tall, is capable offlight, projecting energy blasts, and detecting mutants.[4]

Characteristics

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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(January 2011)

Sentinels are designed to hunt mutants.[5] While many are capable oftactical thought, only a handful areself-aware.

Sentinels are technologically advanced, and have exhibited a wide variety of abilities. They are armed (primarily withenergy weapons and restraining devices), capable of flight, and can detect mutants at long range. They possess vast physical strength, and their bodies are highly resistant to damage.[5] Some are able to alter their physical forms or re-assemble and reactivate themselves after they have been destroyed.

Some Sentinel variants have the ability to learn from their experiences, developing their defenses during an engagement. Several groups of Sentinels have been created or led by a single massive Sentinel calledMaster Mold. Some Sentinels are also equipped with an inconspicuous logic loop in case they should go rogue to convince them that they are mutants.

Because of their power, sophistication, and high mass production, Sentinels are sold on the black market.[6] Entities obtain them—often in poor condition—for their own purposes (not necessarily mutant-related).[5][7]

Types of Sentinels

[edit]
This sectioncontains alist of miscellaneous information. Please helpimprove it byrelocating relevant information into other sections or articles.(July 2018)
Evolution of the Sentinel. Art byArdian Syaf.
  • Mark I andMaster Mold - Created byBolivar Trask. First appeared inX-Men #14. Trask sacrificed himself to destroy the Master Mold.
  • Mark II - Created byLarry Trask. This model was capable of adapting to and counteracting superpowers almost instantly. First appeared inX-Men #57.
    • No.2 - The robotic leader of Larry Trask's Sentinels, later "mutated" with the capability of creating space warps.[8]
  • Composite - Created by merging the remaining portions of five Sentinels destroyed by the X-Men and came under control of Ashley Martin. It rebelled against her and was subsequently destroyed.
  • Mark III - Created bySteven Lang and Project: Armageddon, secretly funded byEdward Buckman and theCouncil of the Chosen. Based on incomplete notes of Trask and inferior to Mark II. First appeared inX-Men #98.
    • X-Sentinels -Android duplicates of the original X-Men who were created by Steven Lang. First appeared inX-Men #99.
  • Mark IV - Created bySebastian Shaw. First appeared inThe Uncanny X-Men #151.
  • Mark V - Created by Shaw for U.S. government'sProject Wideawake. First appeared inThe New Mutants #2.
  • Mark VI - Created by Shaw Industries for Project Wideawake and used byOnslaught. Also incorporated parts of Project Nimrod.
  • Mark VII - Created by Shaw Industries. They were experimental and remote controlled.
  • Nimrod - A prototype Super Sentinel that arrived from the "Days of Future Past" timeline and was later reactivated byWilliam Stryker.
    • Project Nimrod - Created by an offshoot of Project Wideawake and was in the experimental stage, Project Nimrod was actually a self-awareness program that Nimrod implanted before its demise into the base's military computer cybernet, the program served as a sleeper virus that awaited the opportunity to access a Sentinel development program so it could use it to re-create Nimrod itself. Cancelled afterX-Force interfered.
  • Prime Sentinels -Bastion's humanoid Sentinels. They were at first disabled humans infected with Nano-Sentinel technology at Prospero Clinic under the belief that they were being equipped with cybernetic nanotech implants to replace their lost limbs. Unbeknownst to many of them, they became sleeper agents forOperation: Zero Tolerance. Upon activation by a mutant attack or near the presence of one, they would be transformed into armoredcyborg beings with powerful weapons systems.
    • Omega Prime Sentinels - The second generation of Prime Sentinels. Often simply called Omega Sentinels, their nanotechnology is more advanced than their brethren. Omega Sentinels have an eight-step cycle of transformation they undergo before becoming fully mechanical: Infection, Nesting, Replication, Dormancy, Activation, Union, Adaptation, and finally Omega.[9]Karima Shapandar is an Omega Prime Sentinel.
  • Wild Sentinels - Built in secret by Master Mold in Ecuador, activated and used byCassandra Nova for the genocide ofGenosha.
  • Mark VIII /Sentinel SquadO*N*E - Sentinels designed byStark Enterprises which, unlike other Sentinels, requires a human pilot.
    • T.O. Sentinels - An intended upgrade to the Squad O*N*E Sentinels conceived by director Robert Callahan, who sought to use a techno-organic substance to increase the effectiveness of the Sentinel program.[10] Callahan later experimented with material fromWarlock, a techno-organic alien, to augment the Sentinel Squad Armor unit.[11][12]
  • Bio-Sentinels - Human mutant corpse infected by a technological virus created by Kaga.[13] They come with the innate capacity of weaponizing bio-technological apparati such asBrood-designed missiles as a means of offense.[14]
  • Stark Sentinels MK I - The Stark Sentinels debuted during theAXIS storyline. Under the influence of theRed Skull,Tony Stark created a model ofadamantium-constructed Sentinels outfitted with Pym Particle technology with databases withholding knowledge of different super heroes he acquired after the events ofCivil War.[15]
  • Mother Mold - A self-aware version of Master Mold created byOrchis and designed to create "Master Molds" which in turn create Sentinels. Mother Mold will lead directly to the creation of Nimrod, the ultimate nanotechnological Sentinel form.[16]
    • Nimrod - Created in the modern era solely from contemporary technology and independent of its time-travelling counterparts by Dr. Alia Gregor on Orchis's Mother Mold.
  • X-Sentinels - Orchis' new era of Sentinel, which is a modern Sentinel created byMister Sinister's clone Doctor Stasis. He pulled this off by building over his gene-spliced animal/human Chimeras and used the many corpses of Wolverine to perfect a process and converting them into Sentinel units, combining Wolverine's adamantium skeleton and claws with the latest Sentinel casing and systems prove to be a lethal combination.[17]
    • Sentinel Zero - The first X-Sentinel to come online and built over the frame of Wolverine's adamantium skeleton.Firestar incinerated Sentinel Zero's Sentinel parts, leaving a smoking Wolverine skeleton.
  • Stark Sentinel MK II - A new version of Stark Sentinel secretly created by anti-mutant industrialist Feilong and based on technology ofIron Man's armor.[18]
  • Fireteam - A group of cyborg Sentinels created by Larry Trask using nanites harvested fromJuston Seyfert. The Fireteam are tasked with tracking down and capturing dangerous mutants.[19][20]
    • Lockstep (Bradley Hansen)
    • Voivod (Dragos Teodorescu)
    • Sawtooth (Camila Rivera)
    • Shellback (Michael Babineaux)
    • Drumfire (Patricia Pham)
  • Bloodhounds - The Bloodhounds are captured wolves who were turned into Sentinel cyborgs to hunt mutants for the Graymalkin Prison.[21][22]

Related mutant-hunting creations

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The X-Men battle Sentinels inX-Men: Schism #1 (July 2011). Art byCarlos Pacheco and Cam Smith.
  • Tri-Sentinel - A giant-sized, six-armed, three-faced combination of three Sentinels created byLoki and acquired by theLife Foundation.
  • Soviet Sentinels - Created by the Soviet Union and later purchased by Cuban government officials.[23][full citation needed]
  • Super-Sentinels - UsingNano-Sentinel technology,Weapon Plus created artificially evolved superhumans atThe World. Three of the creations were chosen to form the mutant-hunting Super-Sentinels: Huntsman,Fantomex and Ultimaton, who were intended to be presented to the public as superheroes to make the extermination of mutantkind look "like a Saturday morning cartoon".
  • Colcord's Sentinels - Several Boxbots were created byMadison Jeffries (aka Box) to serve theWeapon X Program, run byMalcolm Colcord. In one variation of theDays of Future Past timeline seen in theWeapon X: Days of Future Now limited series, one of the Boxbots evolves into a new Master Mold and a new form of Sentinels.
  • Hardaway - A cyborg created at Camp Hayden, killed by theMutant Liberation Front, who called himself aBio-Sentinel.
  • X-51 (Machine Man) - Captured by Bastion and "infected" with Prime Sentinel nano-bots which reconfigured and reconstructed his systems thereby giving him similar capabilities to Nimrod,[24][25] such as adapting to almost any situation and programming that at times forced him to attack mutants.[26]
  • Juston Seyfert's Sentinel: A rebuilt Sentinel (likely a Mark V or Mark VI) that was reprogrammed to obey Juston Seyfert. Initially, Juston controlled the Sentinel by riding on its shoulder; he now has built a cockpit into it. Juston and his Sentinel are former members ofAvengers Academy and are featured inAvengers Arena, where the Sentinel is destroyed and Juston apparently killed.[27] Juston is later revealed to have been revived after his Sentinel infused his body with nanotechnology, transforming him into a Sentinel cyborg.[19][20]
  • Sentinaughts - One of the types of sentient robots who live in the free robot city of The Core,[28][full citation needed] Sentinaughts are apparently based on the Sentinel design. They vary in size from roughly human to the large stature of traditional Sentinels.
  • Nano-Sentinel - Microscopic Sentinel type of tech created by Cassandra Nova and implemented in various ways by other users.[29] They attach themselves to the brains of humans and mutants alike.[30]
    • An unknown form of human-made Sentinels were created bySimon Trask using a nanite-based Sentinel Tech virus. At Trask's command, the victims are transformed into Sentinels loyal to him.[31]
  • Adamantium Cyborgs - Near-fully mechanical mutant hunter killers refitted by Weapon X with the titular metal as an endoskeleton using sentinel based nanotech. Coming in numerous alphabetical categorical batches, these bionic weapons can shed their skin revealing a murderous automaton with the abilities of various X-Men heroes and villains integrated into them.[32]
  • Core/Central Command - A biotech Master Mold variant behind the design parameters of the new Prime Sentinels.[33]
  • Box Sentinels - Smaller and faster Sentinels based on theBox technology created by a joint venture betweenDepartment H and Orchis to track down and capture mutants in Canada.[34]

In other media

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Television

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  • A Sentinel appears in theSpider-Man and His Amazing Friends episode "A Firestar Is Born" via a flashback.
  • The Sentinels appear inX-Men: The Animated Series, voiced byDavid Fox.[35] Introduced in the first season, the Sentinel program was controlled byBolivar Trask andHenry Peter Gyrich and was temporarily cancelled before being transferred toGenosha, with Master Mold constructed as the Sentinels' leader/mass-production unit. While the Sentinels are seemingly destroyed byStorm, a possible future depicts them as having taken over the world and successfully putting mutants on the verge of extinction. In the first season finale, Master Mold takes over the Sentinels from Trask and Gyrich's secret U.S. facility in an attempt to kidnap world leaders and replace their brains with computers to bring them under its control, resulting inProfessor X andMagneto joining forces to thwart Master Mold. Afterwards, the Sentinels and Master Mold make sporadic minor appearances in the fourth season.
  • The Sentinels appear in theSpider-Man: The Animated Series episode "The Mutant Agenda" as aDanger Room simulation.
  • The Sentinels appear inX-Men: Evolution.[citation needed] These versions are more heavily armed than their comic book counterparts. In the episode "Day of Reckoning" Pt.1, Magento hijacks a prototype Sentinel to attack the X-Men and reveal mutant existence to the media. In "Uprising",S.H.I.E.L.D. uses three upgraded models againstApocalypse. Additionally, the series finale "Ascension" Pt. 2 features a vision of the future which includes a fleet of Sentinels led by Nimrod.
  • A Sentinel appears in theRobot Chicken episode "Sausage Fest".
  • The Sentinels appear inWolverine and the X-Men, voiced byJim Ward.[35] This version of the Sentinel program consists of Mark I Sentinels,Sentinel Prowlers, an unnamed futuristic variation from a Sentinel-dominated future, andSentinel Hounds, all controlled by Master Mold. Additionally, the reprogrammed SentinelRover appears in a self-titled episode as an associate of a future incarnation of the X-Men.
  • Alternate timeline variants of the Sentinels appear inThe Super Hero Squad Show episode "Days, Nights, and Weekends of Future Past! (Six Against Infinity Part 2)", voiced byTom Kenny.[35] These versions were created to defend Super Hero City in a possible future where theScarlet Witch is a dictator.
  • A Sentinel appears inMarvel Anime: X-Men as a Danger Room simulation.
  • A Sentinel appears in theUltimate Spider-Man episode "Game Over" as a part ofArcade's Madland.
  • A Sentinel appears inMarvel Disk Wars: The Avengers.
  • A variation of Sentinel Squad O*N*E appears in theAvengers Assemble four-part episode "Civil War". This version, established byUltron, consists of a mech-sized battlesuit and unmanned green and yellow sentries.
  • The Sentinels appear inThe Gifted.[36] These versions are small spider-like robots created by Trask Industries to withstand various hazardous environments and forms of attack as well as adapt quickly to damage taken. Additionally, a similarly named government agency calledSentinel Services appears throughout the series.
  • The Sentinels appear inX-Men '97, voiced byEric Bauza andJennifer Hale.[37][35][38][39] This version of the Sentinel program consists of the regular robots, athree-headed version, andBastion'sPrime Sentinels.

Film

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Main article:X-Men (film series)
The Sentinels as they appear inX-Men: Days of Future Past (2014); theMark I model in 1973 (left) and theMark X model in 2023 (right)
  • The Sentinels were originally meant to appear inX-Men (2000). In an early draft written byAndrew Kevin Walker and turned in during June 1994,Henry Gyrich andBolivar Trask use three 8 feet (2.4 m) tall Sentinels to attack theX-Men.[40] Following several rewrites and new scripts, the Sentinels were eventually dropped from the film.[41]
  • A Sentinel appears inX-Men: The Last Stand (2006) as a Danger Room simulation.
  • Two variations of the Sentinels appear inX-Men: Days of Future Past (2014).[42][43][44][45] The prototypeMark I Sentinels were designed byLegacy Effects withDigital Domain building digital models based on a full-scale practical model while the futureMark X variants, based on Nimrod Sentinels,[43][45] were computer graphics made byMoving Picture Company. In the film, the prototypes are said to be built using space-age polymers and are equipped with chest-mounted vent-like structures that grant flight capabilities as well as arm-mounted Gatling guns while the future Sentinels are smaller, sleeker, and built with adaptive mechanical scales, hands that can reform into blades, and emitters in their heads capable of firing energy beams. This version of the Sentinel program was originally created in the 1970s, with Bolivar Trask experimenting on mutants to accelerate his research, though he found little success in gaining support for his project. AfterMystique assassinated Trask in 1973, the U.S. government approved the Sentinel program, captured Mystique, and experimented on the latter to give the Sentinels the ability to adapt to and utilize any mutant power. However, the Sentinels subsequently target humans due to their potential for having mutant descendants, culminating in a dystopian future where most of humanity and mutant-kind are nearly extinct by 2023. AfterKitty Pryde uses her ability to project the minds of others into their past selves onLogan to rallyCharles Xavier andErik Lehnsherr's younger selves and avert Trask's assassination, the pair eventually succeed, causing the U.S. government to realize that not all mutants are a threat to humanity and abandon the Sentinel program.
  • The Sentinels make a cameo appearance inX-Men: Apocalypse (2016) as Danger Room simulations.

Video games

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Merchandise

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  • A Sentinel figure was released in Toy Biz'sX-Men Classics line.
  • A Sentinel "Build-A-Figure", based on the "Here Comes Tomorrow" incarnation, was released in wave ten of theMarvel Legends line.
  • Two Sentinel figures was released inHasbro's Marvel Universe line.
  • Two Sentinel figures and a statue were released in the MarvelMinimates line, with the second being based on its appearance inMarvel vs. Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds.
  • A Sentinel figure was released inLego's "X-Men vs. the Sentinel" set.
  • A twenty-six inch Sentinel figure was announced as part of Hasbro's HasLab crowdfunding releases.

Music

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In 2020, Brooklyn rapper Magneto Dayo unveiled "The Sentinels", a project that gained viral traction on Instagram reels in 2024, amassing over 5 million plays.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Misiroglu, Gina Renée; Eury, Michael (2006).The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood. Visible Ink Press.ISBN 9780780809772.
  2. ^"The Top 100 Comic Book Villains".IGN. Retrieved4 November 2017.
  3. ^DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019).The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 318.ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  4. ^Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017).Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 110.ISBN 978-1465455505.
  5. ^abcX-Men (vol. 3) #19-22 (December 2011 - February 2012)
  6. ^M.O.D.O.K.: Head Games #2 (March 2021)
  7. ^Avengers: The Children's Crusade #9 (May 2012)
  8. ^The Avengers #102-104 (August - October 1972)
  9. ^House of X #3 (October 2019)
  10. ^Astonishing X-Men (vol. 3) #9-10 (March - May 2005)
  11. ^New Mutants: Dead Souls #6 (October 2018)
  12. ^Uncanny X-Men (vol. 5) #19 (August 2019)
  13. ^Astonishing X-Men (vol. 3) #31 (December 2009)
  14. ^Astonishing X-Men (vol. 3) #32 (January 2010)
  15. ^Avengers & X-Men: AXIS #1 (December 2014)
  16. ^Powers of X #2 (October 2019)
  17. ^X-Men (vol. 6) #22 (July 2023)
  18. ^The Invincible Iron Man (vol. 5) #5 (June 2023)
  19. ^abDodge, John (January 12, 2025)."Marvel Turns a Long-Lost Superhero Into the Source of the Next Mutant Tragedy".CBR. RetrievedDecember 28, 2025.
  20. ^abJansons, Isaac (January 13, 2025)."X-Men Reinvents a Forgotten Hero with a Dark Sentinel Twist No One Saw Coming".Screen Rant. RetrievedDecember 28, 2025.
  21. ^Sentinels #2 (January 2025)
  22. ^Sentinels #4 (March 2025)
  23. ^Mystique #3-6 (August - November 2003)
  24. ^Cable and Machine Man Annual (May 1998)
  25. ^Machine Man & Bastion Annual (June 1998)
  26. ^X-51 #1-2 (September 1999)
  27. ^Avengers Arena #12 (September 2013)
  28. ^Secret Avengers #25 (June 2012)
  29. ^New X-Men #123 (April 2002)
  30. ^X-Men Red #5 (August 2018)
  31. ^Uncanny X-Men #500 (September 2008)
  32. ^Weapon X (vol. 3) #1 (June 2017)
  33. ^Uncanny X-Men (vol. 4) #15 (January 2017)
  34. ^Alpha Flight (vol. 5) #1 (October 2023)
  35. ^abcdefgh"Sentinel Voice (X-Men)".behindthevoiceactors.com. RetrievedDecember 19, 2019. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  36. ^Schwartz, Terri (16 January 2017)."Legion: X-Men Producer on How Professor X Fits In and Future TV Plans".IGN. Retrieved5 November 2017.
  37. ^Romano, Nick."'X-Men '97' exclusive look reveals legacy costumes, Theo James casting".EW.com. RetrievedFebruary 15, 2024.
  38. ^"Prime Sentinels Voice (X-Men '97)".behindthevoiceactors.com. RetrievedDecember 18, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  39. ^"Female Prime Sentinel Voice (X-Men '97)".behindthevoiceactors.com. RetrievedDecember 18, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  40. ^Walker, Andrew Kevin (June 7, 1994)."X-Men First Draft".Daily Scripts.Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. RetrievedJuly 13, 2007.
  41. ^Kendall, Gene (March 10, 2017)."15 Rejected X-Men Movie Ideas That Almost Happened".Comic Book Resources. Valnet Inc.Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. RetrievedJuly 26, 2019.
  42. ^CS (1 February 2013)."Mark Millar Talks X-Men: Days of Future Past and Kick-Ass 3".ComingSoon.net. Archived fromthe original on 4 February 2013. Retrieved5 November 2017.
  43. ^abFailes, Ian (May 27, 2014)."Future threat – X-Men: Days of Future Past". Fxguide. RetrievedOctober 16, 2014.
  44. ^Sentinels: For a Secure Future.X-Men: Days of Future Past Blu-ray: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. 2014.
  45. ^abSentinels: For a Secure Future (Featurette).X-Men: Days of Future Past Blu-ray: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. 2014.
  46. ^Joe Moore [@JoeMooreDesign] (19 July 2013)."Sentinels in #LEGO #Marvel Super Heroes! @arthur_parsons just said so! ^_^" (Tweet). Retrieved5 November 2017 – viaTwitter.
  47. ^no info given
  48. ^"X-Men get some love in the new Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3 trailer".Polygon. 2019-05-23.

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