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{{Short description|Marvel Comics fictional character}}
:''For [[Quicksilver (DC Comics)]], see [[Max Mercury]].''
{{For|the DC Comics superhero with the former name|Max Mercury}}
{{Superherobox|
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image=[[Image:Quicksilver.png|200px]]
{{Infobox comics character
|caption=Art by Roy Allen Martinez
|character_name=Quicksilver
| character_name = Quicksilver
| image = Quicksilver (Marvel universe character) modern.png
|real_name=Pietro Django Maximoff
| caption=Quicksilver in his modern costume, from ''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' #4 (October 2018).<br />Art by Eric Nguyen.
|species=[[mutant (fictional)|Human Mutant]]
| full_name = Pietro Django Maximoff
|publisher=[[Marvel Comics]]
| species = [[Mutant (Marvel Comics)|Human mutant]] <small>(originally)</small><br />Human mutate <small>([[Retroactive continuity|retconned]])</small>
|debut=''Uncanny X-Men'' vol. 1, #4 (1964)
| publisher = [[Marvel Comics]]
|creators=[[Stan Lee]]<br>[[Jack Kirby]]
| debut = ''[[Uncanny X-Men|The X-Men]]'' #4 (March 1964)
|alliance_color=background:#cccccc
| creators = [[Stan Lee]]<br />[[Jack Kirby]]
|alliances=[[Avengers (comics)|The Avengers]], [[Brotherhood of Evil Mutants]], [[Inhumans]], [[X-Factor (comics)|X-Factor]], [[House of M|House of Magnus]]
| alliances = {{Plain list |
|aliases=Pietro Frank
* [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]
|powers=Time travel by vibrating molecules at faster than light speeds<br>Mutate other beings through use of [[Terrigen Mists|Terrigen Crystal]] formations on his body|}}
* [[Brotherhood of Mutants]]
* [[Inhumans]]
* [[X-Factor (comics)|X-Factor]]
* [[X-Men]]
}}
| aliases = Pietro Frank<br />Mateo Maximoff
| partners = [[Scarlet Witch]]
| powers = *Vast superhuman speed, stamina, reaction and reflexes
* [[Eidetic memory]]
* Rapid healing
* Creation of high speed winds and tornadoes
* Time manipulation
}}
'''Quicksilver''' ('''Pietro Maximoff''') is a fictional character<!-- Please do not specify what type of character you think. Categories like "superhero" & "supervillian" are subjective. It's better to use a generic term and let the reader decide for themselves.--> appearing in [[American comic books]] published by [[Marvel Comics]]. The character first appeared in the comic book ''The [[Uncanny X-Men]]'' #4 (March 1964) and was created by [[Stan Lee]] and [[Jack Kirby]]. The character has since starred in two self-titled [[Limited series (comics)|limited series]] and has historically been depicted as a regular team member in superhero title ''[[The Avengers (comic book)|The Avengers]]''.


Quicksilver has the superhuman ability to move at great speeds. In most depictions, he is a [[Mutant (Marvel Comics)|mutant]], a human born with innate superhuman powers. In comic book stories beginning in 2015, he is the product of genetic experimentation by the [[High Evolutionary]].{{fact|date=August 2023}}<ref>{{cite web|url= http://io9.com/marvel-confirms-scarlet-witch-and-quicksilver-are-no-lo-1703112599|title= Marvel Confirms Scarlet Witch And Quicksilver Are No Longer Mutants|last= Whitbrook|first= James|work= io9.com|archive-url= https://www.webcitation.org/64NTfJTNo?url=http://www.toonopedia.com/scwitch.htm|archive-date= January 1, 2012|url-status= dead|access-date= May 8, 2015}} (link does not say this<!--not deleting link because it is relevant-->)</ref> Quicksilver most commonly appears in fiction associated with the [[X-Men]], having been introduced as an adversary for the superhero team. In later stories, he became a superhero himself. He is the twin brother of the [[Scarlet Witch]] and, in most depictions, the son of [[Magneto (Marvel Comics)|Magneto]] and a [[Sinti]] woman Magda, and the half-brother of [[Polaris (Marvel Comics)|Polaris]].
'''Quicksilver''' ('''Pietro Maximoff''') is a [[fictional character]] that appears in the [[Marvel Universe]]. He has been both a [[superhero]] and a [[supervillain]], and associated with the [[X-Men]], [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]], [[Inhumans]] and [[X-Factor]]. Created by writer [[Stan Lee]] and artist/co-writer [[Jack Kirby]], Quicksilver first appears in ''[[Uncanny X-Men|X-Men]]'' vol. 1, #4 (March 1964). He is the son of the mutant supervillain [[Magneto (comics)|Magneto]], and is the twin brother of the [[Scarlet Witch]] ([[Wanda Maximoff]]). A [[mutant (Marvel Comics)|mutant]], Quicksilver originally possessed the superhuman ability to move, think and react at great speeds.

Debuting in the [[Silver Age of comic books]], Quicksilver has featured in several decades of Marvel continuity, starring in the self-titled series ''Quicksilver'' and as a regular team member in [[superhero]] title the ''[[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]''.

The character has also appeared in a range of movie, television, and video game adaptations. Two separate live-action versions of Quicksilver have been adapted by two different film studios: [[Aaron Taylor-Johnson]] portrayed the character in the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]] (MCU) franchise, appearing in ''[[Captain America: The Winter Soldier]]'' (2014) as a cameo and ''[[Avengers: Age of Ultron]]'' (2015) while [[Evan Peters]] portrayed [[Peter Maximoff|him]] in the [[20th Century Fox]] films ''[[X-Men: Days of Future Past]]'' (2014), ''[[X-Men: Apocalypse]]'' (2016) and ''[[Dark Phoenix (film)|Dark Phoenix]]'' (2019), as well as a cameo in ''[[Deadpool 2]]'' (2018). Peters later appeared as an imposter Pietro in the MCU television series ''[[WandaVision]]'' (2021), as a nod to his past role.


==Publication history==
==Publication history==
[[Image:Quicksilver (Pietro Maximoff).png|thumb|175px|left|Quicksilver as shown on the cover of ''Avengers'' vol. 1, #75 (April 1970). <br />Art by [[John Buscema]] and [[Tom Palmer (comics)|Tom Palmer]]. Before this appearance, his costume was green but otherwise the same.]]
Quicksilver featured in an on-going series. <ref>''Quicksilver'' ran for 13 issues from 1997 - 1998</ref>
Quicksilver first appears in ''[[Uncanny X-Men|X-Men]]'' #4 (March 1964) and was created by writer [[Stan Lee]] and artist/co-writer [[Jack Kirby]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Brown|first=Jonathan Rikard |title=X-Factor vs. X-Factor: A Look at the Role of Identity in Peter David's X-Factor |journal=[[Back Issue!]]|issue=#65|pages=73–78 |publisher=[[TwoMorrows Publishing]]| date=July 2013|location=Raleigh, North Carolina}}</ref> The character initially appears as an antagonist to the X-Men, although before long he becomes a member of the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]] and appears as a regular character in that title beginning with ''The Avengers'' #16 in May 1965. He has made numerous other appearances in that title, and other related titles, sometimes as a member of the team, sometimes as an ally, and sometimes as an antagonist.

From 1991 to 1993 Quicksilver was a regular character in the first volume of ''[[X-Factor (comics)|X-Factor]]''. The series emphasized the character's irritability and arrogance, which writer [[Peter David]] felt were a natural consequence of his powers, explaining:
{{blockquote|Have you ever stood in the [[post office]] behind a woman with 20 packages who wants to know every single way she can send them to Africa? It drives you nuts! You think to yourself, "Why do I have to put up with this? These people are so slow, they're costing me time, and it's so damned irritating. I wish I didn't have to put up with this." Now—imagine that the ''entire world'' was like that... except for you. ... to Quicksilver, as he said in an issue of ''[[Amazing Spider-Man]]'' many, many moons ago, the rest of the world is moving in slow motion. That must really, really get on your nerves. Quicksilver lives in a world filled with people who don't know how to use [[cash machine]]s, and want to know all the ways to send packages to Africa, and can never get your order right in a [[Burger King]] unless you repeat it several times. That would tend to make you feel very superior to everyone and very impatient with everyone.<ref>{{cite news | last = O'Neill | first = Patrick Daniel | date = February 1992 | title = Peter David | work = [[Comics Interview]] | issue = #105 | page = 20 | publisher = [[Fictioneer Books]]}}</ref>}}

Quicksilver also starred in ''Quicksilver'', a regular ongoing eponymous series that began in November 1997 and ran for 13 issues.

The character also played a pivotal role in the ''[[House of M]]'' and ''[[Avengers: The Children's Crusade]]''.

Quicksilver appeared as a supporting character in ''[[Avengers Academy]]'' from issue #1 (August 2010) through its final issue #39 (January 2013). He appears as one of the members of ''All-New [[X-Factor (comics)|X-Factor]]'', which was launched in 2014 as part of the second [[Marvel NOW!]] wave.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=48406 |title=NYCC EXCLUSIVE: David Resurrects the Team in "All-New X-Factor" |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2013-10-11 |access-date=2013-10-31}}</ref> Writer [[Peter David]]'s handling of the character in that book earned the character a 2014 @ssie award from [[Ain't It Cool News]].
AICN's Matt Adler commented that David writes the character best and that the "arrogant, impatient speedster" made the title worth following.<ref>[http://newsle.com/article/0/129185144/ "AICN COMICS 10th Annual @$$IE AWARDS Day Five: Best Crossover/Event! Favorite Superhero! Best Ongoing Series!"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140312224807/http://newsle.com/article/0/129185144/ |date=March 12, 2014 }}. [[Ain't It Cool News]]. March 7, 2014.</ref>


==Fictional character biography==
==Fictional character biography==
Pietro and his twin sister, [[Scarlet Witch|Wanda]], were raised by Django and Marya Maximoff, a [[Romani people|Romani]] couple. As adolescents, Pietro Django Maximoff and his sister Wanda discovered that they had peculiar talents. When Django began to steal food to feed his starving family, enraged villagers attacked the Roma camp. Using his phenomenal speed, Pietro fled from the camp with his sister. Over the next few years, Wanda and Pietro wandered Central Europe, living off the land.


The character first appears with Wanda, now called the Scarlet Witch, as a part of the [[Brotherhood of Evil Mutants]]. The siblings were presented as [[Mutant (Marvel Comics)|mutants]], with Pietro possessing [[superhuman]] speed and Wanda able to control [[probability]]. The pair are recruited by [[Magneto (Marvel Comics)|Magneto]] after he saves Wanda from a mob after she accidentally causes a house to burst into flame. Quicksilver stays with her to protect her.<ref>''X-Men'' #4 (March 1964). Marvel Comics.</ref> After several confrontations with the X-Men,<ref>''X-Men'' #5 (May 1964); #6 (July 1964); #7 (September 1964). Marvel Comics.</ref> they depart when Magneto and his lackey the [[Toad (Marvel Comics)|Toad]] are abducted by the cosmic entity the [[Stranger (comics)|Stranger]].<ref>''X-Men'' #11 (May 1965). Marvel Comics.</ref> They then travel back to Europe. Pietro and his sister reform and are recruited by [[Iron Man]] to the superhero team the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]], after they discover they are advertising for new members and want to get support for themselves.<ref name="Avengers #16 May 1965">''The Avengers'' #16 (May 1965). Marvel Comics.</ref>
Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch's mother - Magda - takes sanctuary at [[Transia|Mount Wundagore]], the home of the [[High Evolutionary]], after seeing her husband Magnus use his magnetic powers for the first time. Once there, she gives birth to the twins but dies soon after. As Wundagore was no place for human infants, the High Evolutionary places them in the care of the [[Roma people|gypsy]] Django Maximoff, who raises the twins as his own children. <ref>Recounted in ''Vision and the Scarlet Witch'' #1 - 12 (1985 - 1986)</ref>


Together with the leader [[Captain America]] and former villain [[Hawkeye (Clint Barton)|Hawkeye]], the four become the second generation of Avengers, and are later dubbed "Cap's Kooky Quartet". Quicksilver first thinks he should be the leader and would sometimes quarrel with the other members. The Scarlet Witch becomes close friends with Hawkeye and both become loyal members of the team until Wanda is accidentally shot on a mission against Magneto. Quicksilver then flees from the Avengers with his wounded sister.<ref>''The Avengers'' #47-49 (December 1968 – February 1969). Marvel Comics.</ref> The pair accompany Magneto back to his mid-[[Atlantic]] base,<ref>''Uncanny X-Men'' #43 (April 1968). Marvel Comics.</ref> where he captures the X-Men<ref>''Uncanny X-Men'' #44 (May 1968)</ref> and Pietro skirmishes with the X-Man [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)|Cyclops]].<ref>''The Uncanny X-Men'' #45 (June 1968). Marvel Comics.</ref> The twins finally realize that Magneto is the true villain. Pietro and Wanda reappear in the title ''X-Men'' and are then kidnapped along with several other mutants by the [[robot]] [[Sentinel (comics)|Sentinels]], and are subsequently freed by the X-Men.<ref>''X-Men'' #59-60 (August – September 1969). Marvel Comics.</ref>
Once Pietro and Wanda reached adulthood, they discovered that they are [[mutants (Marvel Comics)|mutants]]. Pietro discovers he possesses [[superhuman]] speed, while Wanda learns that she can influence probability. The pair later display their powers in public, and are attacked by a superstitious mob. They are saved by their father - now the supervillain Magneto - although neither Magneto nor his children are aware of their connection. Magneto then recruits the pair for the first incarnation of his [[Brotherhood of Evil Mutants]]. The Brotherhood battle the [[X-Men]] on several occasions, although the twins become reluctant members and only remain because of their obligation to Magneto. When Magneto and his lackey the [[Toad (comics)|Toad]] are abducted by the cosmic entity the [[Stranger (comics)|Stranger]], the Brotherhood dissolves and the twins declare their debt to Magneto to have been paid. <ref>''Uncanny X-Men'' vol. 1, #11</ref>


The character reappears in the title ''The Avengers'', and advises the team that Wanda has been kidnapped and taken to another dimension by the warlord [[Arkon]].<ref>''The Avengers'' #75-76 (April – May 1970). Marvel Comics.</ref> After Wanda is rescued, Pietro and his sister rejoin the team. During one mission Quicksilver is wounded by a Sentinel<ref>''The Avengers'' #104 (October 1972). Marvel Comics.</ref> and is found by [[Crystal (comics)|Crystal]], a member of the [[Inhumans]].<ref>''Fantastic Four'' #131 (February 1973). Marvel Comics.</ref> Crystal nurses Pietro back to health, and the pair are eventually married.<ref>''Fantastic Four'' #150 (September 1974). Marvel Comics.</ref> Pietro and Wanda also meet Robert Frank—formerly [[World War II]] hero, the [[Whizzer (Robert Frank)|Whizzer]]—who was present at Mount [[Wundagore]] (the birthplace of the siblings) with his wife at the time of their birth. Frank briefly joins the Avengers, believing Pietro and Wanda to be his children.<ref>''Giant-Size Avengers'' #1 (1974). Marvel Comics.</ref> The Scarlet Witch also becomes romantically involved with her Avengers teammate, the Android [[Vision (Marvel Comics)|Vision]]. Although Pietro initially disapproves, he eventually gives his blessing to their marriage.<ref>''Giant-Size Avengers'' #4 (1975). Marvel Comics.</ref>
Soon after this Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch are recruited by the hero [[Iron Man]] to join the team the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]. Together with leader [[Captain America]] and former villain [[Hawkeye (comics)|Hawkeye]], the four become the second generation of Avengers, and are later dubbed as "Cap's Kooky Quartet". <ref>''Avengers'' vol. 1, #16</ref>
During one mission Quicksilver is wounded by the robot [[Sentinels (comics)|Sentinels]], <ref>''Avengers'' vol. 1, #102</ref> and found by [[Crystal (comics)|Crystal]], a member of the [[Inhumans]]. <ref>''Fantastic Four'' vol. 1, #118</ref> Crystal nurses Pietro back to health, and the pair are eventually married. <ref>''Fantastic Four'' vol. 1 #150</ref>


Quicksilver features with the Inhumans and Fantastic Four against the villain [[Sphinx (Marvel Comics)|Sphinx]],<ref>''Fantastic Four'' Annual #12 (1977). Marvel Comics.</ref> and the siblings' origin is explored in the title ''Avengers'' when a [[Romani people|Romani]] man by the name Django Maximoff, (who is soon revealed to be their biological father), kidnaps Pietro and Wanda and returns to [[Wundagore|Mount Wundagore]] in the country of [[Transia]], where they were born. After a battle with the Avengers against the Elder God Chthon, the siblings learn from [[Bova (comics)|Bova]], one of the ''[[New Men (Marvel Comics)|New Men]]'' created by the [[High Evolutionary]], that they are the children of Maximoff, and not Robert Frank.<ref>''The Avengers'' #185–187 (July – September 1979). Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver then returns to [[Attilan]] (city of the Inhumans)<ref>''The Avengers'' #188 (October 1979). Marvel Comics.</ref> and is revealed to have had a daughter ([[Luna (comics)|Luna]]) with Crystal.<ref>''Fantastic Four'' #240 (March 1982). Marvel Comics.</ref>
It is during this time that Wanda becomes romantically involved with their Avengers teammate, the android [[Vision (comics)|Vision]]. Although Pietro initially disapproves, he eventually gives his blessing to their marriage. <ref>''Giant-Size Avengers'' #4 (1975)</ref> The twins later meet Robert Frank, also known as World War II hero the [[Whizzer]], who was present at Wundagore with his wife at the time of their birth. Robert Frank briefly joins the Avengers, believing Pietro and Wanda to be his children. <ref>The Whizzer joins unofficially as of ''Giant-Size Avengers'' #1 (1974)</ref> This is later disproved when Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch are abducted by Django Maximoff and taken to Wundagore, where after being released they learn the truth from Bova, the midwife who delivered them. <ref>''Avengers'' vol. 1, #185 - 187</ref>


During the [[Limited series (comics)|limited series]] ''Vision and the Scarlet Witch'', Magneto forces Bova to reveal the truth about his missing children, who are revealed to be Pietro and Wanda. After their mother Magda dies in childbirth, the children are given by the High Evolutionary to Django Maximoff to raise as his own. Pietro and Wanda reject Magneto when told.<ref>''Vision and the Scarlet Witch'' #1-4 (November 1982 – February 1983). Marvel Comics.</ref> His marriage to Crystal is also strained when she has an [[affair]].<ref>''Vision and the Scarlet Witch'' vol. 2 #1-12 (October 1985 – September 1986). Marvel Comics.</ref> [[Maximus (comics)|Maximus the Mad]] uses technology to cause Quicksilver to become [[psychotic]].<ref name=autogenerated2>''X-Factor'' Annual #2 (January 1987). Marvel Comics.</ref> This drove him to frame the Avengers for treason as his perceptions are twisted to perceive them as having 'betrayed' him, forcing them to escape the government-sponsored [[Freedom Force (comics)|Freedom Force]], and then deal with Quicksilver's new 'team' of LMD-based duplicates of the [[Zodiac (comics)|Zodiac]], until the Vision convinces Pietro to stand down by showing him images of his newborn nephews.<ref name=":0">''West Coast Avengers'' Annual #1 (1986). Marvel Comics.</ref>
==Darker days==
[[Image:Quicksilver_avengers.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch discover their origin in ''The Avengers'' vol. 1, #185.]]
Quicksilver and Crystal eventually have a daughter, [[Luna (comics)|Luna]]. <ref>''Fantastic Four'' vol. 1, #240</ref> It is at this time that Magneto discovers his relationship to Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch and chooses to tell them the truth. Quicksilver is repulsed and tells Magneto that he had his chance to be a father years ago <ref>''Vision and the Scarlet Witch'' #6 (1986)</ref> Unfortunately Quicksilver and Crystal's marriage is strained when Crystal has an affair <ref>Quicksilver discovers this in ''Vision and the Scarlet Witch'' #10 (1986)</ref> and again later by the actions of [[Maximus the Mad]] - the brother of Inhuman king [[Black Bolt]] - who uses technology to push Quicksilver into insanity and evil behaviour. <ref>First seen in "corrupted" mode in ''West Coast Avengers'' Annual #1 (1986)</ref> Although later cured, <ref>''X-Factor Annual'' #2 (1987)</ref>, Quicksilver is still angry with Crystal and joins the U.S. government-sponsored superhero team [[X-Factor (comics)|X-Factor]]. <ref>''X-Factor'' #71</ref> During this period of estrangement, Crystal almost has an affair with the Avenger the [[Black Knight (comics)|Black Knight]]. <ref>Crystal rejoins the team and meets the Black Knight in ''Avenger''s vol. 1, #343</ref>


Quicksilver and Crystal are finally reunited when the Avengers, X-Factor and X-Men team up to stop a group of mutant terrorists who have kidnapped their daughter Luna and are responsible for a civil war on the island nation of [[Genosha]]. After dealing with the threat, Quicksilver learns of Crystal's relationship with the Black Kight and leaves, also resigning from X-Factor. <ref>[[Bloodties (comics)|Bloodties]] ran for 5 issues through ''Avengers'' vol. 1 #368; ''X-Men'' #26; ''West Coast Avengers'' #101; ''Uncanny X-Men'' vol. 1, #307 and ''Avengers'' vol. 1, #369 (1993)</ref> Quicksilver later takes Luna and joins the High Evolutionary, assisting him and his [[New Men (Marvel Comics)|Knights of Wundagore]] in fighting off the villains [[Exodus (comics)|Exodus]] and [[Man Beast]]. During the course of this war, Quicksilver uses the experimental Isotope E to augment his powers and allow him to move at greater supersonic speeds. <ref>''Quicksilver'' #12</ref>
Quicksilver battles the West Coast Avengers<ref>''West Coast Avengers'' #33-36 (July – September 1988). Marvel Comics.</ref> and is captured by the Inhumans and cured of his condition.<ref name=autogenerated2 /> In an effort to repent for his actions, Pietro aids the Avengers West Coast against Magneto and the villain [[Immortus]], who has captured Wanda.<ref>''Avengers West Coast'' #56-57 (March – April 1990); 60-62 (August – October 1990). Marvel Comics.</ref> Although successful, Pietro refuses to return to Crystal and joins the U.S. government-sponsored superhero team X-Factor.<ref>''X-Factor'' #71-#94 (October 1991 – September 1993). Marvel Comics.</ref> The character and Crystal are reunited during the storyline "[[Bloodties]]" when the Avengers, X-Factor and X-Men team to stop a group of mutant [[terrorist]]s who kidnap their daughter Luna, and are responsible for a [[civil war]] on the [[island]] nation of [[Genosha]]. After dealing with the threat, Quicksilver learns of Crystal's relationship with Avenger the [[Black Knight (Dane Whitman)|Black Knight]]<ref>''The Avengers'' #343 (January 1992). Marvel Comics.</ref> and leaves, also resigning from X-Factor.<ref>''Bloodties'' - ''The Avengers'' #368 (November 1993); ''X-Men'' #26 (November 1993); ''Avengers West Coast'' #101 (December 1993); ''The Uncanny X-Men'' #307 (December 1993) & ''The Avengers'' #369 (December 1993). Marvel Comics.</ref>


Quicksilver takes his daughter Luna and travels to Mt. Wundergore, aiding the High Evolutionary and his [[New Men (Marvel Comics)|Knights of Wundagore]] against [[Exodus (comics)|Exodus]] and the [[Man Beast]]. Quicksilver uses the experimental ''Isotope E'' to augment his powers, allowing him to move at greater supersonic speeds. A future version of Pietro called "Nestor" appears and reveals that his powers are not speed but rather temporal based.<ref>''Quicksilver'' #1-12 (November 1997 – November 1998). Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver also rejoins a reformed Avengers.<ref>''The Avengers'' vol. 3 #1 (February 1998). Marvel Comics.</ref>
== House of M ==
{{main|House of M}}


With half-sister [[Polaris (Marvel Comics)|Polaris]], Quicksilver spies on their father Magneto, who is now the ruler of Genosha. Quicksilver is banished when he rallies the Avengers against Magneto.<ref>''Magneto Rex'' #1 (April 1999); #2-3 (June – July 1999). Marvel Comics.</ref>
The Scarlet Witch suffers a mental breakdown over the loss of her children and starts to warp reality in order to recreate them, resulting in random attacks on the Avengers. The Avengers and [[Doctor Strange]] place her in a coma, and then turn her over to Magneto. Magneto, however, is unable to help her and several members of the Avengers and X-Men suggest killing the Scarlet Witch. A panicking Quicksilver convinces the Scarlet Witch to correct her mistakes by using her powers to turn the world into a world of peace. Wanda then warps reality into the [[House of M]] - a world where mutants are in a majority and humans are in a minority, with Magneto established as absolute ruler.


===House of M===
Several of the heroes eventually regain their memories, and attack Magneto who regains his own memory and realises that Quicksilver is to blame for this disaster. Magneto then kills Quicksilver by crushing him with a Sentinel. The Scarlet Witch, however, revives her brother, and tells Magneto that he has chosen the mutants over his own children. Wanda then says "No more mutants" and changes the world back into its original form, with the result being that 98% of the mutant population are now powerless - including Quicksilver.<ref>''House of M'' #1 - 8 (2005 - 2006)</ref>
Quicksilver plays a pivotal role in the limited series ''[[House of M]]'', convincing his now mentally unstable sister Wanda to use her abilities to warp reality and create a world where mutants are in a majority and humans are the minority. Thanks to Wolverine retaining his memories, along with the mysterious [[Layla Miller]], many of Earth's heroes regain their memories and battle Magneto, who also remembers and realizes that Pietro is to blame for this mistake. Magneto kills Quicksilver (crushing his body with a [[robot]] [[Sentinel (comics)|Sentinel]]) in a rage at this perceived 'abuse' of his dream, although the character is [[resurrect]]ed and the normal reality restored when the Scarlet Witch witnesses this, telling Magneto he cares more for mutants than his own children. In retaliation the Scarlet Witch has also depowered 98% of the mutant population, which by accident includes Quicksilver.<ref>''House of M'' #1-2 (August 2005); #3-4 (September 2005); #5-6 (October 2005); #7 (November 2005); #8 (December 2005). Marvel Comics.</ref>


== Son of M ==
===Son of M===
The story continues in the limited series ''[[Son of M]]'', with Quicksilver, desperate to regain his powers, exposing himself to the [[Terrigen Mist]] (the source of the Inhumans' mutations and abilities) and inserts Terrigen crystals into his body—all without permission from Black Bolt. Courtesy of the Terrigen crystals, Quicksilver gains new "time jumping" powers and kidnaps his daughter Luna. Quicksilver discovers the crystals can restore mutant abilities but have an extreme effect on non-Inhuman physiology, causing several deaths.<ref name="SoM#1t6XF#20">''Son of M'' #1-6 (February – July 2006) & ''X-Factor'' #20 (June 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver and Crystal meet again in the direct sequel, limited series ''[[Silent War]]'' when Black Bolt demands the return of the crystals. When Crystal sees how he has mutated, she declares their marriage [[annul]]led according to Inhuman law.<ref>''Silent War'' #1-6 (March – August 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref>
Quicksilver becomes depressed, and is soon confronted by an angry [[Spider-Man]], who has memories of the altered world in which he was married to deceased love [[Gwen Stacy]] and had a child. Quicksilver decides to kill himself and jumps off a building, seriously injuring himself. Crystal arrives and teleports him to the Inhumans' lunar base for medical attention, believing he has become suicidal at the loss of his powers. After treatment by an Inhuman healer, Quicksilver asks [[Black Bolt]] for permission to undergo Terrigenesis and morph into an Inhuman, being unable to live life as a normal human being. Quicksilver's request, however, is denied as he is of human blood, and Terrigenesis is reserved only for those of pure Inhuman stock to decrease the chance of a detrimental mutation.


In the title ''X-Factor'', the crystals are removed from Quicksilver's body by Rictor, leaving him powerless once again.<ref>''X-Factor'' #20 (June 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref> Destitute and [[jail]]ed for [[vagrancy (people)|vagrancy]] in the [[One-shot (comics)|one-shot]] ''X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead'', Quicksilver has a series of [[hallucination]]s and inexplicably regains his super speed. Escaping jail, Quicksilver rescues an innocent and rediscovers his desire to be a hero.<ref>''X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead'' #1 (July 2008). Marvel Comics.</ref>
Quicksilver ignores the ruling and breaks into the sacred Terrigen Caves to expose himself to the [[Terrigen Mist]]. There appears to be no effect until Pietro is confronted by an older version of himself, who explains the nature of his new "time-jumping" powers, and reveals the plan to take the Terrigen Crystals back to Earth and restore the mutant population. Quicksilver manages to obtain a canister of Terrigen Crystals and with Luna and the Inhumans' pet dog [[Lockjaw (comics)|Lockjaw]] travels to Genosha. Quicksilver then exposes surviving mutants to the mist, which restores their abilities but at dangerous levels.


===Mighty Avengers===
The consequences prove to be disastrous - several mutants die as their powers mutate beyond all control; Luna becomes addicted to the Terrigen Mist; Magneto is beaten senseless in front of Luna by an enraged Quicksilver and the cannister is eventually confiscated by the US military. A desperate Black Bolt attempts to stop this and by uttering the word "war" and unleashing his ultrasonic scream signals the start of war between the Inhumans and the US Government. Quicksilver escapes and exposes himself to even greater levels of Terrigen Mist, which has the unexpected side effect of allowing Pietro to grow the Terrigen Crystals from his actual body and restore mutant abilities at will. Quicksilver now has two goals - "curing" mutants and preventing a great disaster which he glimpses on a trip into the future. <ref>''Son of M'' #1 - 6 (2005 - 2006)</ref>
Quicksilver appears in the title ''[[The Mighty Avengers]]'' and is used as a pawn by Elder God Chthon, with the character's spirit trapped in the arcane [[wikt:tome|tome]] called the [[Darkhold]]. The Avengers defeat Chthon, and Quicksilver's consciousness is "downloaded" into the body of [[Vision (Marvel Comics)|Vision]], before being restored to his own body.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #21-23 (January – March 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver joins the team after learning that it is Wanda ([[Asgard (comics)|Asgardian]] god [[Loki (Marvel Comics)|Loki]] in disguise) who brought the team together.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #24 (April 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref> After the events of the [[Secret Invasion]] storyline<ref>''Secret Invasion'' #1 - 8 (June 2008 – January 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref> the character is publicly [[exonerate]]d of former crimes, with an unknown [[Skrull]] being blamed (although Hank Pym, Maximoff's daughter Luna, and Avengers butler [[Edwin Jarvis]] are aware of the lie). Quicksilver also resumes wearing his original [[green]] costume.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #25 (July 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver loses the respect of his daughter Luna when he lies to the Inhumans and claims that many of his past actions were actually perpetrated by a Skrull impostor,<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #31 (January 2010). Marvel Comics.</ref> although Pym tolerates the lie as he feels that Quicksilver deserves a chance to redeem himself.<ref>''Mighty Avengers'' issue #24</ref>

Quicksilver finally learns that the person he thought was his sister is actually Loki in disguise. Enraged, he and the rest of the team travel to the Isle of Silence to set a trap for the god of mischief. After imprisoning Loki in a device designed by Hank Pym, he begins torturing the god for information about Wanda's whereabouts. Loki offers no information about her and manages to contact Thor to beg for his help. Thor arrives and attacks Quicksilver for the way he is treating Loki. He is able to outrun the thunder god's lightning but is eventually overpowered.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #34 (April 2010). Marvel Comics.</ref> He is one of the Avengers who joins [[Hercules (Marvel Comics)|Hercules]], [[Amadeus Cho]] and their allies in an assault on Olympus Group Headquarters. He battles Amazon warrior women alongside [[Zeus (Marvel Comics)|Zeus]]<ref>''The Incredible Hercules'' #139 (February 2010). Marvel Comics.</ref> and helps a wounded Wolverine defeat the [[Huntsman (Cephalus)|Huntsman]], stabbing him through the chest with his own weapon.<ref>''The Incredible Hercules'' #141 (April 2010). Marvel Comics.</ref>

Quicksilver is later summoned by the [[Ghost (Marvel Comics)|Ghost]] using Amadeus Cho's technology, to defend Asgard against the Thunderbolts. He single-handedly defeats [[Mister X (Marvel Comics)|Mister X]] who is in possession of the [[Gungnir|Spear of Odin]]. Mr. X is not able to react quickly enough despite his abilities and Quicksilver viciously beats him down with a piece of debris.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #35. Marvel Comics.</ref> He is seen alongside the other Avengers against the Void-possessed Sentry in the events of Siege.<ref>''The Mighty Avengers'' #36. Marvel Comics.</ref>

===Avengers: The Children's Crusade===
Quicksilver is searching for his sister in Wundagore when Magneto and the Young Avengers go to find the Scarlet Witch.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2012}} After trying to abduct his nephew Wiccan so he can assist him in finding his sister, he is stopped by his father and his other nephew, Speed.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2012}} After Wiccan suggests that maybe Magneto actually did want to make up for his past, he became angry and said, "Nephew the last time I allowed myself to believe that..... My father tried to kill me".{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2012}} Quicksilver prepares to fight his father but when debris from his rampage strikes his sister it is found that the Scarlet Witch there is actually a Doombot in disguise.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2012}} The journey takes Quicksilver and his comrades all the way to Latveria so they rescue the Scarlet Witch.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2012}} After the Scarlet Witch turns herself into the X-Men and the Avengers a fight breaks out between the two groups.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=December 2012}} After being knocked out along with all the other Avengers and X-Men by his sister, he is finally reunited with his sister.<ref>''Avengers: The Children's Crusade'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref>

===Heroic Age===
Quicksilver joins the teaching staff of [[Avengers Academy]] to teach young students how to become heroes. He does so in order to distance himself from the legacy of his father Magneto.<ref>''Avengers Academy'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> One of the new students, Finesse, figures out that his story about being abducted by Skrulls is a lie. She blackmails him into giving her "private lessons" on everything he learned during his time with the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants.<ref>''Avengers Academy'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> Finesse convinces Quicksilver to help her search for the Taskmaster, who might be her biological father. After arriving at what they thought was an abandoned training camp, they found it still in use and quickly captured the criminals they found there. Quicksilver returned to the mansion and encountered Tigra, who was upset because some of the students assaulted the Hood on her behalf. During a heated exchange Quicksilver managed to convince her that kicking them out of Avengers Academy for trying to help would only turn them against becoming heroes.<ref>''Avengers Academy'' #9. Marvel Comics.</ref> At the new campus for the Avengers Academy (where the Faculty are offering to train other superpowered youths), Quicksilver is revealed to be mentoring [[Julie Power|Lightspeed]] as a teacher's assistant.<ref>''Avengers Academy'' #21. Marvel Comics.</ref>

In the miniseries "Magneto: Not a Hero", [[Joseph (comics)|Joseph]] is resurrected under unknown circumstances and forms a new Brotherhood of Mutants with [[Astra (Marvel Comics)|Astra]] and mutated deformed versions of [[Blob (comics)|Blob]], [[Mastermind (Jason Wyngarde)|Mastermind]], Quicksilver, [[Scarlet Witch]], and [[Toad (Marvel Comics)|Toad]]. It is soon revealed that the mutated versions of Blob, Mastermind, Quicksilver, Scarlet Witch and Toad are clones created by Joseph.<ref>''Magneto: Not a Hero'' #1-4. Marvel Comics.</ref>

Quicksilver has joined the privately owned superhero team X-Factor.<ref>''All-New X-Factor'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> When confronted during a press conference by [[Fatale (Marvel Comics)|Fatale]] over his actions meant to repower mutants and his lying about a Skrull having been responsible, Pietro finally admitted in public that he had been responsible and had tried to avoid facing the consequences; by doing this, he earned his daughter's love and respect back, and the two reconciled.<ref>''All-New X-Factor'' #12. Marvel Comics.</ref>

Wanda and other heroes and villains experienced a moral inversion during a clash with the [[Red Skull|Red]] [[Onslaught (Marvel Comics)|Onslaught]].<ref>''Avengers & X-Men: AXIS'' #3. Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver and Magneto try to talk the inverted Wanda down, but when Wanda attacks them with a curse designed to punish her blood relatives that only affects Quicksilver, Wanda realizes that Magneto is not their biological father.<ref>''Avengers & X-Men: AXIS'' #7. Marvel Comics.</ref>

Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch later take a trip to [[Counter-Earth (comics)|Counter-Earth]].<ref>''Uncanny Avengers'' vol. 2 #1-2. Marvel Comics.</ref> After being tracked down and defeated by Luminous (a female who was created by the genetic material of Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver), Pietro and Wanda were brought to the High Evolutionary himself. He revealed to them that they are actually the long thought deceased children of Django and Marya Maximoff, Anna and Mateo. He also told them the truth where they were not mutants at all, but they had been experimented on by the High Evolutionary. After escaping from the High Evolutionary's experimentations, Pietro and Wanda located the Avengers Unity Division (who had traveled to the Counter-Earth looking for the twins) and helped the inhabitants of Lowtown (a refuge for the High Evolutionary's rejects) from their creator's assault.<ref name="ReferenceA">''Uncanny Avengers'' vol. 2 #4. Marvel Comics.</ref> After the High Evolutionary is defeated and he escapes into a portal with Luminous, Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch return to Earth with the Avengers Unity Division.<ref>''Uncanny Avengers'' vol. 2 #5. Marvel Comics.</ref>

===All-New, All-Different Marvel===
When the [[Civil War II|second superhero Civil War]] began, Pietro came to ask Wanda for help, but Wanda refused, because she and Pietro disagreed on which side was right - Pietro not liking the idea of profiling people based on what they might do and Wanda feeling that thinking about the future would have prevented many of their more dangerous mistakes in the past - past precedent made Wanda feel that introducing her powers to a conflict of this nature could be more dangerous than the existing situation, and she resented Pietro still trying to tell her what to do as though she was a child, bluntly informing him that his refusal to learn from his mistakes marked him as a sociopath. Wanda reveals to him that she is seeking answers about their true biological mother, Natalya Maximoff (who gave the twins to her relatives Marya and Django to spare them from a difficult life) and asks him to join her. He refuses and the two fight, although Wanda bests Quicksilver and tells him she never wants to see him again.<ref>''Scarlet Witch'' vol. 2 #9. Marvel Comics.</ref> Natalya's spirit later summons Pietro during their final battle against a physical manifestation of Chaos. The twins reconcile after destroying the monster and Pietro is briefly able to meet his mother before she sacrifices herself to save witchcraft.<ref>''Scarlet Witch'' vol. 2 #14. Marvel Comics.</ref> He has also been revealed to have fallen under the telepathic control of the [[Red Skull]], acting as a 'sleeper agent' in the Avengers as part of the Skull's current campaign.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=October 2016}}

During the "[[Secret Empire (2017 comic)|Secret Empire]]" storyline, Quicksilver appears as a member of the Underground which is a resistance movement against Hydra, following their take over of the United States.<ref>''Secret Empire'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver and Hercules lead a strike force to find the Cosmic Cube fragments so that they can use it to restore Captain America and the country to normal.<ref>''Secret Empire'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref>

===Marvel Legacy===
During the "Avengers: No Surrender" storyline, Quicksilver is one of the heroes remaining in the cosmic game between [[Grandmaster (comics)|Grandmaster]] and Challenger.<ref>''The Avengers'' #675. Marvel Comics.</ref> He is frozen because of [[Scarlet Witch]]’s attempt at reviving the frozen Vision,<ref>''The Avengers'' #677. Marvel Comics.</ref> but the process was later reversed.<ref>''The Avengers'' #678. Marvel Comics.</ref> He later uses his extreme agility and [[Scarlet Witch]]'s powers to catch the beacon trapping his fellow Avengers, but in doing so he had pushed himself to the limit and apparently died.<ref name="ReferenceB">''The Avengers'' #688. Marvel Comics.</ref> But in the following mini-storyline of ''Quicksilver: No Surrender'', it is revealed that he became stuck in an alternate dimension, ultimately getting himself free and returning to the Avengers.<ref>''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' #1-5. Marvel Comics.</ref>

During the "[[Empyre]]" storyline, Quicksilver, [[Mockingbird (Marvel Comics)|Mockingbird]], and [[Wonder Man]] deal with the Kree and the Skrull's fight with the [[Cotati (comics)|Cotati]] near [[Navojoa]]. When Quicksilver is hit by special spheres fired by the Cotati magicians, Mockingbird and Wonder Man come to his aid and help the Kree and the Skrull turn the tide against the Cotati.<ref>''Empyre: Avengers'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver recovers his stamina and uses his super-speed to break up the fight and dispose of the Kree and Skrull weapons in the [[Gulf of California]].<ref>''Empyre: Avengers'' #2-3. Marvel Comics.</ref>

During the "[[Blood Hunt (Marvel Comics)|Blood Hunt]]" storyline, Quicksilver is among the superheroes that join Captain America's branch of the Avengers when it comes to fighting a vampire invasion.<ref>''Avengers'' Vol. 9 #14. Marvel Comics.</ref>


==Powers and abilities==
==Powers and abilities==
Quicksilver was presented as a [[Mutant (Marvel Comics)|mutant]] capable of moving and thinking at superhuman speeds. Capable of running at the [[speed of sound]],<ref>{{Marvelwiki|Quicksilver|Quicksilver}}</ref> exposure to the [[High Evolutionary]]'s Isotope E made it possible for the character to run at [[Supersonic|supersonic speeds]] of up to [[Mach number|Mach]] 10 and resist the effects of [[friction]], reduced [[oxygen]], and [[kinetic energy|kinetic]] impact while moving at super-speeds.<ref name="OHotMUV2#10"/><ref>''Avengers vs. X-Men'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> Also, he has a fast metabolism and can heal more rapidly than the average human.<ref name="OHotMUV2#10"/> His speed allows him to perform such feats as creating [[cyclone]]-strength winds and running up walls or across bodies of water.<ref name="OHotMUV2#10">''Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe'' Vol 2 #10. Marvel Comics.</ref><ref>''Avengers'' Vol 3 #40. Marvel Comics.</ref> Pietro's mind can perceive information with a [[Eidetic memory|photographic memory]] short term, becoming faster than the [[Action potential|speed of thought]], because he can shift his thoughts at a speed faster than normal thought.<ref name="OHotMUAtZ9">''Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z'' #9. Marvel Comics.</ref> Also, he can cause vibrations in his body to transfer to solid material and has superior agility and reflexes compared to other mutants.<ref name="OHotMUAtZ9"/><ref name="XF#1"/> It has been revealed that one of the reasons for his abrasive and impatient personality is that it seems to him that the rest of the world is moving in slow motion and that he is constantly waiting for it to catch up. As he once explained, "Have you ever stood in line at a banking machine behind a person who didn't know how to use it?... Now, imagine, Doctor, that everyone you work with, everywhere you go, your entire world is filled with people who can't work cash machines".<ref>''X-Factor'' #87: "The X-Amination". Marvel Comics.</ref>
[[Image:SonofM-2.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Quicksilver exposed to Terrigen Crystals in ''Son of M'' #2 (2006). Art by [[John Watson]].]]
Quicksilver was originally capable of running at the speed of sound (770 miles per hour), but exposure to the High Evolutionary's Isotope E made it possible for him to run at supersonic speeds of up to Mach 5 (3,806 miles per hour). After losing his powers, Quicksilver regained metahuman abilities courtesy of the Terrigen Mists.


Quicksilver lost his powers of speed when his sister removed most of his powers, but he gains new powers courtesy of the inhumans' [[Terrigen Mist]]. The mist gives Quicksilver the ability to displace himself out of mainstream time and space and "jump" into the future. He can summon several time-displaced duplicates of himself and appear to teleport by "jumping" into the future and then returning to the present at a new location.<ref>''Son of M'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref><ref>''Son of M'' #6. Marvel Comics.</ref><ref name="SoM#1t6XF#20"/> By voluntarily embedding fragments of the Terrigen Crystals into his own body, he could empower former mutants with extreme versions of their superhuman abilities.<ref name="XFV3#7">''X-Factor'' Vol 3 #7. Marvel Comics.</ref> However, the effect was usually fatal.<ref name="XFV3#7"/><ref>''X-Factor'' Vol 3 #11. Marvel Comics.</ref><ref name="SoM#1t6XF#20"/> The crystals were subsequently forced from his body by the mutant [[Rictor]], leaving him without these abilities. After having a series of hallucinations, Quicksilver saw a woman in mortal danger and felt a desire to be a hero which made him regain his original powers in order to save the woman's life.<ref name="XF#1">''X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> Later on, Quicksilver regained these enhanced powers of time "jumping" and temporal duplication for a while by physically imbedding the crystals into his flesh.<ref>''Silent War'' #3-4. Marvel Comics.</ref>
Quicksilver can now vibrate his atoms so quickly that the molecular speed he generates displaces him out of mainstream time and space and a "jump" into the future is possible. Quicksilver could initially jump from an hour to up to twelve days into the future and remain for several minutes or even several hours before tiring and being recalled to his present time. Quicksilver can also return at will at any time. When Quicksilver returns, he arrives back at almost the exact moment (and place) he left so as to appear to have been gone for a nano-second. Quicksilver is also able to bring inorganic objects back from the future. This ability, however, seems to have affected his physical health, as each time Quicksilver meets up with a future self, they look increasingly haggard. Quicksilver has also discovered how to jump only mere seconds ahead in time, and create an indefinite number of "temporal dupes" that can be controlled with a certain amount of coordination.


It was later revealed that Quicksilver actually was a normal child that was put through several experiments by the [[High Evolutionary]] which granted his powers in the first place.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
Several weeks of exposure to the Terrigen Crystals has also caused an anomaly within Quicksilver in that the Crystals now grow out of his body, granting him the ability to empower former mutants with their superhuman abilities. It is unknown as to whether the effect is permanent, but the results are apparently unpredictable. Quicksilver has claimed that the chaotic results are due to a lack of worthiness on the mutants' behalf, which has yet to be proven. <ref>''Son of M'' #6 (2006)</ref>


==Ultimate Quicksilver==
== Reception ==
=== Accolades ===


* In 2006, ''[[IGN]]'' ranked Quicksilver 23rd in their "Top 25 X-Men Of All Time" list.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Goldstein |first1=Hilary |last2=George |first2=Richard |date=May 15, 2006 |title=The Top 25 X-Men |url=http://comics.ign.com/articles/708/708826p1.html |access-date=March 17, 2010 |website=IGN}}</ref>
[[Image:Ultimates08.jpg|150px|right|thumb|Quicksilver with the Scarlet Witch in ''The Ultimates'' vol. 1, #8. Art by [[Bryan Hitch]].]]
* In 2012, ''[[IGN]]'' ranked Quicksilver 44th in their "Top 50 Avengers" list.<ref>{{cite web |date=April 30, 2012 |title=The Top 50 Avengers |url=http://www.ign.com/top/avengers/44 |access-date=July 28, 2015 |website=[[IGN]]}}</ref>
In the [[Ultimate Marvel]] Universe, Quicksilver was a member of Magneto's [[Brotherhood of Mutants|Brotherhood]] who together with the Scarlet Witch goes on to join the [[Ultimates]]. This version of Quicksilver has undergone continuous emotional abuse by Magneto which culminates in Quicksilver abandoning him and joining the Ultimates. The Ultimate version of Quicksilver is also faster than the [[Earth-616]] was when possessing super speed, and states that as a teenager he was capable of reaching speeds of Mach 10. <ref>''Ultimates 2'' #12 (2006)</ref>
* In 2016, ''[[Screen Rant]]'' ranked Quicksilver 6th in their "12 Fastest Superheroes Of All Time" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Moore |first=Rose |date=2016-04-19 |title=12 Fastest Superheroes Of All Time |url=https://screenrant.com/fastest-superheroes-all-time/ |access-date=2022-08-30 |website=ScreenRant |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2018, ''[[CBR.com]]'' ranked Quicksilver 10th in their "25 Fastest Characters In The Marvel Universe" list.<ref>{{Cite web |author=C. B. R. Staff |date=2018-05-27 |title=The 25 Fastest Characters In The Marvel Universe, Officially Ranked |url=https://www.cbr.com/fastest-marvel-characters-ranked/ |access-date=2022-08-08 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2020, ''[[CBR.com]]'' ranked Quicksilver 5th in their "10 Greatest Speedsters In Comics" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Faraci |first=Derek |date=2020-12-15 |title=Race To The Top: 10 Greatest Speedsters In Comics, Ranked |url=https://www.cbr.com/greatest-comic-speedsters-ranked/ |access-date=2022-08-08 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2021, ''[[Screen Rant]]'' ranked Quicksilver 3rd in their "10 Fastest X-Men In Marvel Comics" list.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-12-30 |title=The 10 Fastest X-Men In Marvel Comics |url=https://screenrant.com/x-men-fastest-characters-marvel-comics/ |access-date=2022-08-08 |website=ScreenRant |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2021, ''[[Looper (website)|Looper]]'' ranked Quicksilver 7th in their "Fastest Speedsters In History" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Young |first=Aaron |date=2021-10-11 |title=Fastest Speedsters In History Ranked |url=https://www.looper.com/629481/fastest-speedsters-in-history-ranked/ |access-date=2022-08-08 |website=Looper.com |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[The A.V. Club]]'' ranked Quicksilver 71st in their "100 best Marvel characters" list.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-07-05 |title=The 100 best Marvel characters ranked |url=https://www.avclub.com/best-marvel-movie-heroes-of-all-time-1849130982 |access-date=2022-11-15 |website=The A.V. Club |language=en}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[Collider (website)|Collider]]'' included Quicksilver in their "Top 5 Fastest Superheroes" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Grimaldi |first=John |date=2022-07-05 |title=Top 5 Fastest Superheroes |url=https://collider.com/fastest-superheroes/ |access-date=2022-08-08 |website=Collider |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[CBR.com]]'' ranked Quicksilver 8th and Ultimate Quicksilver 6th in their "20 Fastest Speedsters" list<ref>{{Cite web |last=Stanford |first=Jerry |date=2021-06-19 |title=Marvel: The 20 Fastest Speedsters, Ranked |url=https://www.cbr.com/marvel-fastest-speedsters-ranked/ |access-date=2022-08-08 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref> and 7th in their "10 Scariest Avengers" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Harth |first=David |date=2022-06-19 |title=10 Scariest Avengers |url=https://www.cbr.com/scariest-avengers-marvel-comics/ |access-date=2022-10-24 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref>


== Literary reception ==
==Alternate versions==


=== Volumes ===
* In [[Marvel 1602]], Quicksilver appears as Petros, the assistant (and secretly, son) of the High Inquisitor of the Spanish Catholic Church, Enrique (the 1602 version of Magneto).


==== ''Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver'' - 2011 ====
*In the [[MC2]] universe, the speedster [[Bluestreak (comics)|Bluestreak]] is based on Quicksilver.
According to [[Diamond Comic Distributors]], ''Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver'' #1 was the 148th best selling comic book in November 2011.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Comichron: November 2011 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops |url=https://www.comichron.com/monthlycomicssales/2011/2011-11.html |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=www.comichron.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Top 300 Comics Actual--November 2011 |url=https://icv2.com/articles/comics/view/21712/top-300-comics-actual-november-2011 |access-date=2022-09-24 |website=icv2.com |language=en}}</ref>


Peyton Hinckle of ''[[ComicsVerse]]'' said, "Origin stories make superheroes. They tell us about a character's motivations, dreams, and memories. They're the perfect insight into why a character becomes a hero (or a villain). As readers, we need origin stories to understand the heroes we love. For a long time, Scarlet Witch and her brother Quicksilver had a half-formulated backstory. At first, they were just members of Magneto's brotherhood. But, eventually, they realized that they were also Magneto's children. The older comics don't give us an up-close look at Wanda's childhood, so in 2011 writer Sean McKeever tackled retelling Wanda and Pietro's story in a modern climate. The result was ''Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver'', which finally gave readers the origin story they wanted. If you want to read about Scarlet Witch, but have no idea where to start, this is the issue for you."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Hinckle |first=Peyton |date=December 31, 2018 |title=Marvel's Slice of Chaos Magic: A Scarlet Witch Essential Reading Guide |url=https://comicsverse.com/scarlet-witch-reading-guide/ |website=[[ComicsVerse]]}}</ref> George Marston of ''[[Newsarama]]'' ranked ''Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver'' 6th in their "The best Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch stories of all time" list, asserting, "In comic books, Wanda and Pietro's time as villains was short-lived, and their prior history wasn't largely explored until years later, through glimpses and scattered stories. But 2011's ''Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch & Quicksilver'' takes a deeper dive into the histories of the titular heroes, showing their past and the lead-up to their time with the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants in a way that wasn't previously told on the page. Wanda and Pietro's history is one of the most unlikely backbones of the Marvel Universe, with their simple origins growing from a throughline between the X-Men and Avengers to the saga of a family tree that has branches throughout Marvel Comics, and ''Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch & Quicksilver'' presents a concise and engaging take on their earliest days."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Marstonpublished |first=George |date=2021-12-22 |title=The best Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch stories of all time |url=https://www.gamesradar.com/scarlet-witch-comics-wanda-maximoff-comic-books/ |access-date=2022-09-03 |website=gamesradar |language=en}}</ref>
==Appearances in other media==


==== ''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' - 2018 ====
* Quicksilver appears in [[Data East]]'s 1991 arcade game, ''[[Captain America and the Avengers]]'' as a supporting character.
According to [[Diamond Comic Distributors]], ''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' #1 was the 119th best selling comic book in May 2018.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Comichron: May 2018 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops |url=https://www.comichron.com/monthlycomicssales/2018/2018-05.html |access-date=2022-11-15 |website=www.comichron.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Top 500 Comics--May 2018 |url=https://icv2.com/articles/markets/view/40671/top-500-comics-may-2018 |access-date=2022-11-15 |website=icv2.com |language=en}}</ref>


Joe Grunenwald of ''[[ComicsBeat]]'' asserted, "''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' #1 is an entertaining first issue about a complicated protagonist. This series spins out of the events of ''Avengers: No Surrender'', but is still perfectly accessible for new readers (like me), and only briefly mentions previous events before getting into its own story. It's a solid beginning for the series."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Jones |first=Alexander |date=2018-05-16 |title=THE MARVEL RUNDOWN: Till Continuity do us Part: Our Thoughts on X-MEN: THE WEDDING SPECIAL #1! |url=https://www.comicsbeat.com/the-marvel-rundown-till-continuity-do-us-part-our-thoughts-on-x-men-the-wedding-special-1/ |access-date=2022-11-15 |website=The Beat |language=en-US}}</ref> Joshua Davison of ''[[Bleeding Cool]]'' called ''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' #1 a "brilliant character-focused comic," saying, "''Quicksilver: No Surrender #1'' starts off on the right foot with a ponderous and self-reflective issue for Pietro Maximoff. Ahmed, Nguyen, and Renzi provide a compelling conflict for our hero with brilliant artwork and stunning color. This one gets a strong recommendation. Give it a read."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Davison |first=Joshua |date=2018-05-17 |title=Quicksilver: No Surrender #1 Review - A Brilliant Character-Focused Comic - Bleeding Cool |url=https://bleedingcool.com/comics/quicksilver-no-surrender-1-review/ |access-date=2022-11-15 |website=Bleeding Cool News And Rumors |language=en}}</ref> Aaron Berkowitz of ''[[ComicsVerse]]'' gave ''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' #1 a score of 90%, writing, "has amazing characterization. Ahmed writes Pietro near-flawlessly. The plot is also incredibly intriguing. I want to know how Pietro gets out of this mess. However, I wasn't a big fan of the art. Flip through the issue at your local comic shop and decide for yourself. For me, the writing was well worth the read, and may be well worth your $3.99."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Berkowitz |first=Aaron |date=May 16, 2018 |title=A Man Out of Time in QUICKSILVER: NO SURRENDER #1 |url=https://comicsverse.com/quicksilver-no-surrender-1-review/ |website=[[ComicsVerse]]}}</ref>
* Quicksilver guest-stars in several episodes of the ''[[X-Men (animated series)|X-Men Animated Series]]''. He is voiced by Paul Haddad.


==Other versions==
* Quicksilver appears in the [[animated television series]] ''[[X-Men: Evolution]]'' Quicksilver is voiced by [[Richard Ian Cox]].


===''JLA/Avengers''===
* In ''[[X2 (film)|X2: X-Men United]]'', the name "Maximoff" appears on a computer screen in a list of mutant names.
In the [[DC Comics|DC]]/Marvel crossover ''[[JLA/Avengers]]'', Pietro first appears being brainwashed by [[Starro]] when the Avengers battle him. Thanks to a combination of Wanda's magic and [[Ms. Marvel]]'s powers, they manage to get Starro's probe off of him.<ref>''JLA/Avengers'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> When he and the other Avengers go to the [[DC Universe]], he becomes fascinated with the [[Speed Force]], seeking to empower by it and defeating [[Flash (DC Comics character)|The Flash]] ([[Wally West]]), but he fails twice. During the final battle in the [[Savage Land]], he finally defeats the Flash, but only does so because there is no Speed Force in the Marvel Universe.<ref>''JLA/Avengers'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> He makes an appearance in the final battle with [[Krona (DC Comics)|Krona]], but it is very brief. He also appears at the end as one of the heroes that started out the entire event.<ref>''JLA/Avengers'' #4. Marvel Comics.</ref>


===Marvel Zombies===
* Quicksilver has a [[cameo]] appearance in the video game [[X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse]].
In the limited series ''[[Marvel Zombies]]'', [[Marvel Zombies|Earth-2149]] is contaminated with a [[virus]] that turns victims into flesh-eating ''[[zombie]]s'', with Quicksilver infected when bitten by a "zombified" [[Mystique (comics)#Marvel Zombies|Mystique]] (who at the time was impersonating his sister [[Scarlet Witch#Marvel Zombies|Wanda]]). This results in the rapid spread of the zombie virus, as Quicksilver is able to infect hundreds around the world in a short amount of time.<ref>''Marvel Zombies Vs. The Army of Darkness'' #1-5 (May – September 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref> The character reappears in the limited series ''[[Marvel Zombies 3]]'', revealed to be working for a "zombified" [[Kingpin (comics)#Marvel Zombies|Wilson Fisk]]. Quicksilver is eventually lured into a trap by the [[Earth-616]] [[Machine Man]] and subsequently destroyed.<ref>''Marvel Zombies 3'' #1-4 (December 2008 – March 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref> The zombie virus spreads to a different Quicksilver in 'Earth Z', who is featured in the limited series ''[[Marvel Zombies Return]]''. Here, his body is capable of operating independently of the head.<ref>'' Marvel Zombies: Return'' #5. Marvel Comics.</ref>


===Marvel Zombies Return===
==Other characters by the same name==
When the zombies from [[Multiverse (Marvel Comics)|Earth]]-2149 cross over into Earth-Z, Quicksilver is transformed into a zombie, and in [[Marvel Zombies Return]] #5 is one of the few remaining zombies left who fought against [[Zombie Spider-Man|Spider-Man]] and his New Avengers, attempting to steal a canister containing the 'cure' that Spider-Man had developed, only for the wall-crawler to accidentally pull Quicksilver's head off when trying to catch him with his webbing. He was killed by a cyborg Iron Man.<ref>'' Marvel Zombies Return'' #5 (September 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref>
[[Quality Comics]] published a super-speedster named Quicksilver in ''[[National Comics (series)|National Comics]]'', during the [[Golden Age of comic books]]; when he was revived by DC Comics in the pages of ''The Flash'', he was renamed [[Max Mercury]] to avoid trademark confusion with Marvel's long-established character (similar to DC's use of Shazam! as the title for the comic starring [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|Captain Marvel]]).


== References ==
===Marvel 1602===
Limited series [[Marvel 1602]] depicts Quicksilver as Petros, the assistant (and secretly, son) of the High Inquisitor of the Spanish Catholic Church, [[Alternative versions of Magneto#1602|Enrique]].<ref>''Marvel 1602'' #1-8 (November 2003 – June 2004). Marvel Comics.</ref>
<div class="references-small">
<references/>
</div>


===Ultimate Marvel===
[[Ultimate Marvel]] features Quicksilver as '''Pietro Lensherr''' as the son of Magneto and a woman named Isabelle. As a teenager, he was capable of reaching speeds of [[Mach number|Mach 10]] and spent most of his life in the [[Savage Land]]. <ref>''The Ultimates'' #1-7 (March – September 2002); #8 (November 2002); #9 (April 2003); #10 (July 2003); #11 (September 2003); #12 (November 2003); #13 (April 2004); ''The Ultimates'' 2 #1-6 (February – July 2005); #7 (September 2005); #8 (November 2005); #9 (January 2006); #10 (March 2006); #11-12 (July – August 2006); #13 (February 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref>

After he and his sister [[Scarlet Witch (Ultimate Marvel)|Wanda/Scarlet Witch]], defected from their abusive father's [[Brotherhood of Mutants#Ultimate Marvel|Brotherhood of Mutant Supremacy]], they joined the [[Ultimates]] for amnesty. During the [[Ultimate X-Men]]'s [[List of Ultimate X-Men story arcs#Magnetic North|Magnetic North]] story arc, he watched over his father while he was imprisoned in the Triskelion, and threatened to kill him.<ref>''Ultimate X-Men'' #61-65 (July – November 2005)</ref> In ''[[The Ultimates 3]]'', he and his sister are apparently killed by [[Ultron]]; however, Quicksilver later resurfaced at the end of the [[List of Ultimate X-Men story arcs#Absolute Power|Absolute Power]] story arc, and killed [[Moira MacTaggert#Ultimate Marvel|Moira MacTaggert]].<ref>''Ultimate X-Men'' #100 (February 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref>

In ''[[Ultimatum (Ultimate Marvel)|Ultimatum]]'' #5, Quicksilver assassinated [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)#Ultimate Marvel|Cyclops]] as he is giving a speech at [[Washington, D.C.]], using the same bullet that was used to murder the Scarlet Witch.<ref>''Ultimatum'' #5 (July 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref>

Following the deaths of major characters of the X-Men and the Brotherhood, Pietro began to search for new Brotherhood team members. Mystique, Sabretooth and Teddy (the son of Blob) joined him in Wundagore, along with an apparently reborn Wanda.<ref>''Ultimate Comics: Ultimate X'' #5. Marvel Comics.</ref>

Following his sister's orders, Quicksilver tried to help the White House, only resulting in the death of many mutants at the hands of [[Nimrod (comics)#Ultimate Marvel|Nimrod Model]] [[Sentinel (comics)#Ultimate Marvel|Sentinels]], which were controlled by the [[William Stryker#Ultimate Marvel|Reverend Stryker]] before his death. When Pietro arrived in Egypt, he met his father, Erik, completely alive.<ref>'' Ultimate Comics: X-Men'' #6</ref> However, this was revealed to be an illusion from [[Mister Sinister#Ultimate Marvel|Sinister]].<ref>''Ultimate Comics: X-Men'' #13</ref> He attempts to manipulate his younger half-brother, [[Jimmy Hudson]], but is defeated.<ref>''Ultimate Comics: Wolverine'' #1-4. Marvel Comics.</ref>

Later, he helps [[Maker (Reed Richards)|Reed Richards]] assemble some of the [[Infinity Gems]] and joins his team of [[Dark Avengers#Ultimate Marvel|Dark Ultimates]].<ref>''Ultimate Comics: Ultimates'' #25</ref> Quicksilver is fatally wounded after he turns against Richards and [[Kang the Conqueror#Ultimate Marvel|Kang]], and chooses to die by Wanda's graveside.<ref>''Ultimate Comics: Ultimates'' #29. Marvel Comics.</ref>

Pietro later appeared to have been somehow brought back to life. He witnessed an instance of the cosmic phenomenon known as an "incursion", the one which caused a collision between the planet Earth of his universe and that of an alternate reality, Earth-616, that resulted in the destruction of both universes.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=July 2017}}

When the Multiverse was eventually rebuilt after the "[[Secret Wars (2015 comic book)|Secret Wars]]" storyline, Quicksilver and the other foreign mutants, namely Jimmy, Nomi Blume aka Mach Two, [[Guardian (Marvel Comics)#Derek Morgan|Derek Morgan]] and [[Armor (Marvel Comics character)#Ultimate Marvel|Hisako Ichiki/Armor]], were abducted by super-villain geneticist [[Miss Sinister]], who brainwashed and turned them into her personal enforcers, the [[Marauders (comics)|New Marauders]]. When Jimmy's natural resistance to telepathy allowed him to break free from Miss Sinister's control and he went rogue, the New Marauders were deployed to retrieve him. In the process, they confronted the Time-Displaced Original X-Men, who had tracked down Jimmy after he was detected by Cerebro.<ref>''X-Men: Blue'' #4. Marvel Comics.</ref> Following a brief confrontation against the X-Men and Jimmy during which Marvel Girl learned of Miss Sinister's involvement, the New Marauders were ordered by their superior to leave.<ref>''X-Men: Blue'' #5. Marvel Comics.</ref> Quicksilver later died due to the Mothervine experiments that was conducted on him where the other displaced mutants survived these experiments. The X-Men later found his body in one of Miss Sinister's abandoned laboratories.<ref>''X-Men: Blue'' #12. Marvel Comics.</ref>

===What If?===
Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch appear in the ''[[What If (comics)|What If?]]'' story "What If the X-Men Died on their First Mission?" as allies of [[Beast (comics)|Beast]] following the demise of the [[X-Men]] and upon the menace by [[Count Nefaria]] and his [[Ani-Men]]. Although invited to join the newly formed team upon the success of their mission, both decline in favor of their current commitments, although they promise their aid if they are needed.<ref>''What If'' vol. 2 #9 (1990). Marvel Comics.</ref>

===X-Men Noir===
In the one-shot ''[[X-Men Noir]]'', Peter Magnus is a former college track star, and works in the Homicide Department of the [[NYPD]] with his father: [[Alternative versions of Magneto#X-Men: Noir|Eric Magnus]], Chief Detective and the leader of The Brotherhood.<ref>''X-Men Noir'' #1 (December 2008). Marvel Comics.</ref>

==In other media==
===Television===
* Quicksilver appears in the "Captain America" segment of ''[[The Marvel Super Heroes]]'', voiced by [[Len Carlson]].<ref>Episode 8: "The Coming of the Swordsman/Vengeance Is Ours/Emissary of Destruction"</ref> This version is a member of the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]].
* Quicksilver appears in ''[[X-Men: The Animated Series]]'', voiced by Adrian Egan and [[Paul Haddad]].<ref name=btva>{{Cite web|url=https://www.behindthevoiceactors.com/characters/X-Men/Quicksilver/|title=Quicksilver Voices (X-Men)|website=Behind The Voice Actors}}</ref> This version is a member of [[X-Factor (comics)|X-Factor]].
* Quicksilver appears in ''[[X-Men: Evolution]]'', voiced by [[Richard Ian Cox]].<ref name=btva/> This version is a teenager and member of the [[Brotherhood of Mutants|Brotherhood of Bayville]]. In a vision of the future depicted in the two-part series finale "Ascension", Quicksilver and the Brotherhood have reformed and joined [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]]
* Quicksilver appears in ''[[Wolverine and the X-Men (TV series)|Wolverine and the X-Men]]'', voiced by [[Mark Hildreth (actor)|Mark Hildreth]].<ref name=btva/> This version is the leader of the Brotherhood of Mutants and a resident of [[Genosha]]. Despite being banished in the series finale, he is welcome to return.
* Quicksilver appears in ''[[The Super Hero Squad Show]]'' episode "Hexed, Vexed, and Perplexed!", voiced by [[Scott Menville]].<ref name=btva/> Raised by [[Magneto (Marvel Comics)|Magneto]] to be villains, Quicksilver and his sister [[Scarlet Witch]] turn on their father after the [[Falcon (comics)|Falcon]] offers them his friendship.

===Film===
{{Main|Peter Maximoff}}

Marvel licensed the filming rights of the [[X-Men]] and related concepts, such as [[Mutant (Marvel Comics)|mutants]], to [[20th Century Fox]], who created a [[X-Men (film series)|film series]] based on the franchise. Years later, Marvel started their own film franchise, the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]] (MCU), which focused on characters that they had not licensed to other studios, such as the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]] (see below). As a result, Quicksilver and [[Scarlet Witch]] became part of a claims dispute between the two studios, with Fox citing the pair being mutants and children of [[Magneto (Marvel Comics)|Magneto]] and Marvel citing the pair's editorial history making them more closely associated with the Avengers rather than the X-Men. In time, the two studios came to an agreement, allowing each other to use the characters so long as Fox did not reference them as members of the Avengers and Marvel did not mention them as mutants or children of Magneto.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.businessinsider.com/why-quicksilver-is-in-x-men-and-avengers-2015-4|title=Why these two characters are allowed to appear in both the X-Men and Avengers movies|last=Acuna|first=Kirsten|date=April 30, 2015|work=Business Insider|access-date=April 27, 2016}}</ref> The arrangement became moot following the [[acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney]] - the parent company of [[Marvel Studios]], and the confirmation that future X-Men films will take place within the Marvel Cinematic Universe.<ref>{{cite web|first=Zack|last=Sharf|date=April 9, 2019 |title=Kevin Feige Says 'It Will Be a Very Long Time' Until the X-Men Join the Marvel Cinematic Universe|url= https://www.indiewire.com/2019/04/kevin-feige-long-time-x-men-marvel-cinematic-universe-1202057131/|work=[[IndieWire]]|access-date=September 10, 2020 }}</ref>

A character based on Quicksilver named '''Peter Maximoff''' appears in the Fox films ''[[X-Men: Days of Future Past]]'' (2014), ''[[X-Men: Apocalypse]]'' (2016), ''[[Deadpool 2]]'' (2018), and ''[[Dark Phoenix (film)|Dark Phoenix]]'' (2019) portrayed by [[Evan Peters]].<ref name="QuickTwitter">{{cite web |url=http://www.superherohype.com/news/articles/177099-evan-peters-joins-x-men-days-of-future-past-as-quicksilver|title=Evan Peters Joins X-Men: Days of Future Past as Quicksilver|publisher=Superhero Hype |date=May 23, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PETJo87Bdig| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211103/PETJo87Bdig| archive-date=2021-11-03 | url-status=live|title=X-Men: Days Of Future Past Quicksilver controversy: writer Simon Kinberg speaks|last=Total Film|date=20 May 2014|access-date=9 August 2016|via=YouTube}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2014/05/21/quicksilver-will-have-expanded-role-in-x-men-apocalypse|title= Quicksilver will have expanded role in X-Men:Apocalypse |work=IGN|date=May 21, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/x-men-dark-phoenix-evan-peters-returning-as-quicksilver-1018062|title='X-Men: Dark Phoenix': Evan Peters Returning as Quicksilver (Exclusive)|last=Kit|first=Borys|work=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]|date=June 29, 2017|access-date=June 30, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170701055559/http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/x-men-dark-phoenix-evan-peters-returning-as-quicksilver-1018062|archive-date=July 1, 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="X-MenCameos">{{cite web|url=http://comicbook.com/marvel/2018/05/18/deadpool-2-x-men-cameo-scene-professor-beast/|title=Simon Kinberg Directed That Hilarious 'Deadpool 2' Scene|last=Davis|first=Brandon|website=ComicBook.com|date=May 18, 2018|access-date=May 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180519121507/http://comicbook.com/marvel/2018/05/18/deadpool-2-x-men-cameo-scene-professor-beast/|archive-date=May 19, 2018|url-status=live}}</ref> This version is an American teenager and an acquaintance of [[Logan (film series character)|Logan]]'s in the future. To demonstrate his super-speed, ''Days of Future Past'' director [[Bryan Singer]] shot all of Quicksilver's scenes in 3,600 frames per second.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/BryanSinger/statuses/364850784426409984 |title=Twitter / BryanSinger: Brightest set I've ever filmed |publisher=Twitter.com |access-date=2013-09-26}}</ref><ref>[http://www.25moments.com/#!/moments/1977 "1977 World Record Scandal"]. X-Men: 25 Moments. Retrieved December 31, 2014.</ref> Over the course of his appearances, Peter helps the X-Men fight [[Apocalypse (character)|Apocalypse]] before joining them and learns [[Magneto (film character)|Magneto]] is his father, but chooses not to tell him.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cinemablend.com/new/X-Men-Apocalypse-Feature-Bigger-Better-Quicksilver-Scene-72656.html|title=X-Men: Apocalypse Will Feature A Bigger And Better Quicksilver Scene|publisher=CinemaBlend.com|last=Libbey|first=Dirk|date=18 July 2015 |access-date=September 2, 2015}}</ref>

===Marvel Cinematic Universe===
{{See also|Pietro Maximoff (Marvel Cinematic Universe)}}

In the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]] (MCU), Pietro Maximoff is portrayed by [[Aaron Taylor-Johnson]]. He first appeared alongside his twin sister [[Wanda Maximoff (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Wanda]] ([[Elizabeth Olsen]]) in a mid-credits scene for ''[[Captain America: The Winter Soldier]]'' (2014), with the two subsequently appearing in leading roles in ''[[Avengers: Age of Ultron]]'' (2015).<ref name="WinterSoldier">{{cite magazine |first=Jenna |last=Milly |date=March 14, 2014 |title='Captain America: The Winter Soldier' premiere: Crossover is the word |url=http://popwatch.ew.com/2014/03/14/captain-america-the-winter-soldier-premiere/ |magazine=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |access-date=March 17, 2014 |archive-date=March 18, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140318013857/http://popwatch.ew.com/2014/03/14/captain-america-the-winter-soldier-premiere/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="AgeofUltron">{{cite web |url= http://marvel.com/news/story/21563/official_elizabeth_olsen_aaron_taylor-johnson_join_avengers_age_of_ultron |title= Official: Elizabeth Olsen & Aaron Taylor-Johnson Join 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' |publisher= Marvel |date= November 25, 2013 |access-date= November 25, 2013 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140321215822/http://marvel.com/news/movies/2013/11/25/21563/official_elizabeth_olsen_aaron_taylor-johnson_join_avengers_age_of_ultron |archive-date= March 21, 2014 |url-status= live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.stitchkingdom.com/disney-marvels-avengers-age-ultron-official-synopsis-spells-big-trouble-tony-stark-72694/ |title= Marvel's 'Avengers: Age of Ultron' Official Synopsis Spells Big Trouble for Tony Stark |work= Stitch Kingdom |date= September 15, 2014 |access-date= September 15, 2014 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140917235856/http://www.stitchkingdom.com/disney-marvels-avengers-age-ultron-official-synopsis-spells-big-trouble-tony-stark-72694/ |archive-date= September 17, 2014 |url-status= live }}</ref> Pietro and Wanda seek revenge on [[Tony Stark (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Tony Stark]], whose weapons killed their parents, by joining [[Hydra (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Hydra]], who use the [[Infinity Stones|Mind Stone]] to grant them superhuman powers after they volunteer to be experimented on.<ref>{{cite video |first= Matt |last= Goldberg |date= May 5, 2014 |title= Avengers 2: Aaron Taylor Johnson & Elizabeth Olsen Talk Quicksilver & Scarlet Witch |url= http://www.ign.com/videos/2014/07/27/avengers-2-aaron-taylor-johnson-elizabeth-olsen-talk-quicksilver-scarlet-witch |work= IGN |access-date= July 27, 2014 |archive-date= November 26, 2014 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20141126115151/http://www.ign.com/videos/2014/07/27/avengers-2-aaron-taylor-johnson-elizabeth-olsen-talk-quicksilver-scarlet-witch |url-status= dead }}</ref> After Stark and the [[Avengers (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Avengers]] defeat the Hydra cell they were working with, the Maximoffs join forces with [[Ultron (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Ultron]], only to learn he intends to kill all of humanity and defect to the Avengers to stop him. While thwarting his plot, Pietro dies while saving [[Clint Barton (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Hawkeye]] and a small child. Despite Taylor-Johnson signing a multi-picture deal,<ref>{{cite web|first=Matt|last=Goldberg|date=May 5, 2014 |title=Elizabeth Olsen and Aaron Taylor-Johnson Talk AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON, Working on the Accents, Thoughts on the Set Photos, and More|url=http://collider.com/avengers-age-of-ultron-interview-elizabeth-olsen-aaron-taylor-johnson/|work=Collider |access-date=May 5, 2014 }}</ref> producer [[Kevin Feige]] has stated that there are no plans for Pietro to appear in future films.<ref>{{cite web|first=Adam|last=Holmes|date=May 9, 2015 |title=What Kevin Feige Thinks Of Quicksilver's Future At Marvel|url=http://www.cinemablend.com/new/What-Kevin-Feige-Thinks-Quicksilver-Future-Marvel-71343.html|work=Cinema Blend |access-date=May 9, 2015 }}</ref> Following Disney's acquisition of Fox's film division, Taylor-Johnson was asked if he might return to the role, with the implication being that Evan Peters' competing version played a part in Feige's prior statement. While he expressed belief both parties were open to the possibility in the future, Taylor-Johnson reiterated that there were no immediate plans for him to reprise his role - specifically addressing speculation he would appear in the [[Disney+]] series ''[[WandaVision]]''.<ref>{{cite web|first=Robin|last=Burks|date=November 26, 2019 |title= Exclusive: Quicksilver Won't Return Anytime Soon Says Aaron Taylor-Johnson |url= https://screenrant.com/mcu-quicksilver-return-aaron-taylor-johnson-update/ |work=[[Screen Rant]]|access-date=September 9, 2020}}</ref> Although Taylor-Johnson did not reprise his role in the series, the character would be referenced, with Gabriel Gurevich portraying him as a child in flashbacks to Wanda's childhood, while Peters portrays [[Ralph Bohner]], a resident of Westview who is brainwashed by [[Agatha Harkness (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Agatha Harkness]] and forced to impersonate Pietro to get close to Wanda until he is freed by [[Monica Rambeau (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Monica Rambeau]].<ref name="Peters">{{Cite web |last=Schmidt |first=JK |date=February 5, 2021 |title=WandaVision Reveals SPOILER's Shocking Debut in Episode 5 |url=https://comicbook.com/tv-shows/news/wandavision-episode-5-quicksilver-evan-peters-spoilers-x-men/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210205085433/https://comicbook.com/tv-shows/news/wandavision-episode-5-quicksilver-evan-peters-spoilers-x-men/ |archive-date=February 5, 2021 |access-date=February 5, 2021 |website=Comicbook.com}}</ref>

===Video games===
* Quicksilver appears in ''[[Captain America and the Avengers]]'' as a member of the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]].{{citation needed|date=March 2016}}
* Quicksilver makes a cameo appearance in ''[[X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse]]'' as a member of [[Magneto (Marvel Comics)|Magneto]]'s [[Brotherhood of Mutants]].{{citation needed|date=March 2016}}
* Quicksilver appears as a boss in the [[PlayStation Portable|PSP]], [[PlayStation 2|PS2]], and [[Wii]] versions of ''[[Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2]]'', voiced by [[Robert Tinkler]].<ref name=btva/>
* Quicksilver appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Super Hero Squad: The Infinity Gauntlet]]'', voiced again by [[Scott Menville]].{{citation needed|date=March 2016}}
* Quicksilver appears in ''[[X-Men: Destiny]]'',<ref>{{cite web|last=McWhertor|first=Michael|title=X-Men Destiny Screen Shots|url=http://kotaku.com/5736008/x+men-destiny-screen-shots//gallery/1|website=Kotaku|date=17 January 2011 }}</ref> voiced by Sunil Malhotra.{{citation needed|date=March 2016}}
* Quicksilver appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel: Avengers Alliance]]''.{{citation needed|date=March 2016}}
* Quicksilver appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Super Hero Squad Online]]'', voiced again by Scott Menville.<ref name=btva/>
* Quicksilver appears as a playable character in ''[[Lego Marvel's Avengers]]'', voiced by archival audio of [[Aaron Taylor-Johnson]].{{citation needed|date=January 2016}}
* Quicksilver appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel: Future Fight]]''.<ref>[https://www.newsarama.com/36375-marvel-future-fight-adds-cable-apocalypse-more-x-men-characters.html "X-MEN's AGE OF APOCALYPSE Joins MARVEL FUTURE FIGHT"]. ''newsarama.com''.</ref>
* Quicksilver appears as a playable character in ''[[Marvel Puzzle Quest]]''.{{citation needed|date=January 2022}}

== Collected editions ==
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Title
!Material collected
!Published date
!ISBN
|-
|''Avengers: Quicksilver''
|''Quicksilver'' #1-13, ''Heroes for Hire'' (vol. 1) #15-16, and ''Heroes for Hire/Quicksilver Annual '98''
|March 2015
|{{ISBNT|978-0785192930}}
|-
|''Decimation: Son Of M''
|''Son of M'' #1-6
|August 2006
|{{ISBNT|978-0785119708}}
|-
|''X-Factor Vol. 5: The Only Game In Town''
|''X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead'' and ''X-Factor'' (vol. 3) #28-32
|December 2008
|{{ISBNT|978-0785128632}}
|-
|''Avengers: Mythos''
|''Avengers Origins: Quicksilver & The Scarlet Witch'' and ''Mythos: Hulk, Captain America; Avengers Origins: Ant -Man & the Wasp, Luke Cage, Vision, Thor''
|January 2013
|{{ISBNT|978-0785148609}}
|-
|''Quicksilver: No Surrender''
|''Quicksilver: No Surrender'' #1-5
|December 2018
|{{ISBNT|978-1302912956}}
|}

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
* {{Marvelwiki|Quicksilver|Quicksilver}}
* {{Marvelwiki|Quicksilver_(Ultimate)|Ultimate Quicksilver}}
* [http://toonopedia.com/quicksil.htm Quicksilver (1964)] at [[Don Markstein's Toonopedia]]. [https://archive.today/20161111144121/http://toonopedia.com/quicksil.htm Archived] from the original on November 4, 2016

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{{Avengers characters}}

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[[Category:X-Factor (comics)]]
[[Category:Fictional Gypsies|Quicksilver]]
[[Category:X-Men supporting characters]]

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[[pt:Mercúrio (Marvel Comics)]]
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Latest revision as of 15:45, 11 May 2024

Quicksilver
Quicksilver in his modern costume, from Quicksilver: No Surrender #4 (October 2018).
Art by Eric Nguyen.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe X-Men #4 (March 1964)
Created byStan Lee
Jack Kirby
In-story information
Full namePietro Django Maximoff
SpeciesHuman mutant (originally)
Human mutate (retconned)
Team affiliations
PartnershipsScarlet Witch
Notable aliasesPietro Frank
Mateo Maximoff
Abilities
  • Vast superhuman speed, stamina, reaction and reflexes
  • Eidetic memory
  • Rapid healing
  • Creation of high speed winds and tornadoes
  • Time manipulation

Quicksilver (Pietro Maximoff) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in the comic book The Uncanny X-Men #4 (March 1964) and was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. The character has since starred in two self-titled limited series and has historically been depicted as a regular team member in superhero title The Avengers.

Quicksilver has the superhuman ability to move at great speeds. In most depictions, he is a mutant, a human born with innate superhuman powers. In comic book stories beginning in 2015, he is the product of genetic experimentation by the High Evolutionary.[citation needed][1] Quicksilver most commonly appears in fiction associated with the X-Men, having been introduced as an adversary for the superhero team. In later stories, he became a superhero himself. He is the twin brother of the Scarlet Witch and, in most depictions, the son of Magneto and a Sinti woman Magda, and the half-brother of Polaris.

Debuting in the Silver Age of comic books, Quicksilver has featured in several decades of Marvel continuity, starring in the self-titled series Quicksilver and as a regular team member in superhero title the Avengers.

The character has also appeared in a range of movie, television, and video game adaptations. Two separate live-action versions of Quicksilver have been adapted by two different film studios: Aaron Taylor-Johnson portrayed the character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) franchise, appearing in Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) as a cameo and Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015) while Evan Peters portrayed him in the 20th Century Fox films X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014), X-Men: Apocalypse (2016) and Dark Phoenix (2019), as well as a cameo in Deadpool 2 (2018). Peters later appeared as an imposter Pietro in the MCU television series WandaVision (2021), as a nod to his past role.

Publication history[edit]

Quicksilver as shown on the cover of Avengers vol. 1, #75 (April 1970).
Art by John Buscema and Tom Palmer. Before this appearance, his costume was green but otherwise the same.

Quicksilver first appears in X-Men #4 (March 1964) and was created by writer Stan Lee and artist/co-writer Jack Kirby.[2] The character initially appears as an antagonist to the X-Men, although before long he becomes a member of the Avengers and appears as a regular character in that title beginning with The Avengers #16 in May 1965. He has made numerous other appearances in that title, and other related titles, sometimes as a member of the team, sometimes as an ally, and sometimes as an antagonist.

From 1991 to 1993 Quicksilver was a regular character in the first volume of X-Factor. The series emphasized the character's irritability and arrogance, which writer Peter David felt were a natural consequence of his powers, explaining:

Have you ever stood in the post office behind a woman with 20 packages who wants to know every single way she can send them to Africa? It drives you nuts! You think to yourself, "Why do I have to put up with this? These people are so slow, they're costing me time, and it's so damned irritating. I wish I didn't have to put up with this." Now—imagine that the entire world was like that... except for you. ... to Quicksilver, as he said in an issue of Amazing Spider-Man many, many moons ago, the rest of the world is moving in slow motion. That must really, really get on your nerves. Quicksilver lives in a world filled with people who don't know how to use cash machines, and want to know all the ways to send packages to Africa, and can never get your order right in a Burger King unless you repeat it several times. That would tend to make you feel very superior to everyone and very impatient with everyone.[3]

Quicksilver also starred in Quicksilver, a regular ongoing eponymous series that began in November 1997 and ran for 13 issues.

The character also played a pivotal role in the House of M and Avengers: The Children's Crusade.

Quicksilver appeared as a supporting character in Avengers Academy from issue #1 (August 2010) through its final issue #39 (January 2013). He appears as one of the members of All-New X-Factor, which was launched in 2014 as part of the second Marvel NOW! wave.[4] Writer Peter David's handling of the character in that book earned the character a 2014 @ssie award from Ain't It Cool News. AICN's Matt Adler commented that David writes the character best and that the "arrogant, impatient speedster" made the title worth following.[5]

Fictional character biography[edit]

Pietro and his twin sister, Wanda, were raised by Django and Marya Maximoff, a Romani couple. As adolescents, Pietro Django Maximoff and his sister Wanda discovered that they had peculiar talents. When Django began to steal food to feed his starving family, enraged villagers attacked the Roma camp. Using his phenomenal speed, Pietro fled from the camp with his sister. Over the next few years, Wanda and Pietro wandered Central Europe, living off the land.

The character first appears with Wanda, now called the Scarlet Witch, as a part of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. The siblings were presented as mutants, with Pietro possessing superhuman speed and Wanda able to control probability. The pair are recruited by Magneto after he saves Wanda from a mob after she accidentally causes a house to burst into flame. Quicksilver stays with her to protect her.[6] After several confrontations with the X-Men,[7] they depart when Magneto and his lackey the Toad are abducted by the cosmic entity the Stranger.[8] They then travel back to Europe. Pietro and his sister reform and are recruited by Iron Man to the superhero team the Avengers, after they discover they are advertising for new members and want to get support for themselves.[9]

Together with the leader Captain America and former villain Hawkeye, the four become the second generation of Avengers, and are later dubbed "Cap's Kooky Quartet". Quicksilver first thinks he should be the leader and would sometimes quarrel with the other members. The Scarlet Witch becomes close friends with Hawkeye and both become loyal members of the team until Wanda is accidentally shot on a mission against Magneto. Quicksilver then flees from the Avengers with his wounded sister.[10] The pair accompany Magneto back to his mid-Atlantic base,[11] where he captures the X-Men[12] and Pietro skirmishes with the X-Man Cyclops.[13] The twins finally realize that Magneto is the true villain. Pietro and Wanda reappear in the title X-Men and are then kidnapped along with several other mutants by the robot Sentinels, and are subsequently freed by the X-Men.[14]

The character reappears in the title The Avengers, and advises the team that Wanda has been kidnapped and taken to another dimension by the warlord Arkon.[15] After Wanda is rescued, Pietro and his sister rejoin the team. During one mission Quicksilver is wounded by a Sentinel[16] and is found by Crystal, a member of the Inhumans.[17] Crystal nurses Pietro back to health, and the pair are eventually married.[18] Pietro and Wanda also meet Robert Frank—formerly World War II hero, the Whizzer—who was present at Mount Wundagore (the birthplace of the siblings) with his wife at the time of their birth. Frank briefly joins the Avengers, believing Pietro and Wanda to be his children.[19] The Scarlet Witch also becomes romantically involved with her Avengers teammate, the Android Vision. Although Pietro initially disapproves, he eventually gives his blessing to their marriage.[20]

Quicksilver features with the Inhumans and Fantastic Four against the villain Sphinx,[21] and the siblings' origin is explored in the title Avengers when a Romani man by the name Django Maximoff, (who is soon revealed to be their biological father), kidnaps Pietro and Wanda and returns to Mount Wundagore in the country of Transia, where they were born. After a battle with the Avengers against the Elder God Chthon, the siblings learn from Bova, one of the New Men created by the High Evolutionary, that they are the children of Maximoff, and not Robert Frank.[22] Quicksilver then returns to Attilan (city of the Inhumans)[23] and is revealed to have had a daughter (Luna) with Crystal.[24]

During the limited series Vision and the Scarlet Witch, Magneto forces Bova to reveal the truth about his missing children, who are revealed to be Pietro and Wanda. After their mother Magda dies in childbirth, the children are given by the High Evolutionary to Django Maximoff to raise as his own. Pietro and Wanda reject Magneto when told.[25] His marriage to Crystal is also strained when she has an affair.[26] Maximus the Mad uses technology to cause Quicksilver to become psychotic.[27] This drove him to frame the Avengers for treason as his perceptions are twisted to perceive them as having 'betrayed' him, forcing them to escape the government-sponsored Freedom Force, and then deal with Quicksilver's new 'team' of LMD-based duplicates of the Zodiac, until the Vision convinces Pietro to stand down by showing him images of his newborn nephews.[28]

Quicksilver battles the West Coast Avengers[29] and is captured by the Inhumans and cured of his condition.[27] In an effort to repent for his actions, Pietro aids the Avengers West Coast against Magneto and the villain Immortus, who has captured Wanda.[30] Although successful, Pietro refuses to return to Crystal and joins the U.S. government-sponsored superhero team X-Factor.[31] The character and Crystal are reunited during the storyline "Bloodties" when the Avengers, X-Factor and X-Men team to stop a group of mutant terrorists who kidnap their daughter Luna, and are responsible for a civil war on the island nation of Genosha. After dealing with the threat, Quicksilver learns of Crystal's relationship with Avenger the Black Knight[32] and leaves, also resigning from X-Factor.[33]

Quicksilver takes his daughter Luna and travels to Mt. Wundergore, aiding the High Evolutionary and his Knights of Wundagore against Exodus and the Man Beast. Quicksilver uses the experimental Isotope E to augment his powers, allowing him to move at greater supersonic speeds. A future version of Pietro called "Nestor" appears and reveals that his powers are not speed but rather temporal based.[34] Quicksilver also rejoins a reformed Avengers.[35]

With half-sister Polaris, Quicksilver spies on their father Magneto, who is now the ruler of Genosha. Quicksilver is banished when he rallies the Avengers against Magneto.[36]

House of M[edit]

Quicksilver plays a pivotal role in the limited series House of M, convincing his now mentally unstable sister Wanda to use her abilities to warp reality and create a world where mutants are in a majority and humans are the minority. Thanks to Wolverine retaining his memories, along with the mysterious Layla Miller, many of Earth's heroes regain their memories and battle Magneto, who also remembers and realizes that Pietro is to blame for this mistake. Magneto kills Quicksilver (crushing his body with a robot Sentinel) in a rage at this perceived 'abuse' of his dream, although the character is resurrected and the normal reality restored when the Scarlet Witch witnesses this, telling Magneto he cares more for mutants than his own children. In retaliation the Scarlet Witch has also depowered 98% of the mutant population, which by accident includes Quicksilver.[37]

Son of M[edit]

The story continues in the limited series Son of M, with Quicksilver, desperate to regain his powers, exposing himself to the Terrigen Mist (the source of the Inhumans' mutations and abilities) and inserts Terrigen crystals into his body—all without permission from Black Bolt. Courtesy of the Terrigen crystals, Quicksilver gains new "time jumping" powers and kidnaps his daughter Luna. Quicksilver discovers the crystals can restore mutant abilities but have an extreme effect on non-Inhuman physiology, causing several deaths.[38] Quicksilver and Crystal meet again in the direct sequel, limited series Silent War when Black Bolt demands the return of the crystals. When Crystal sees how he has mutated, she declares their marriage annulled according to Inhuman law.[39]

In the title X-Factor, the crystals are removed from Quicksilver's body by Rictor, leaving him powerless once again.[40] Destitute and jailed for vagrancy in the one-shot X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead, Quicksilver has a series of hallucinations and inexplicably regains his super speed. Escaping jail, Quicksilver rescues an innocent and rediscovers his desire to be a hero.[41]

Mighty Avengers[edit]

Quicksilver appears in the title The Mighty Avengers and is used as a pawn by Elder God Chthon, with the character's spirit trapped in the arcane tome called the Darkhold. The Avengers defeat Chthon, and Quicksilver's consciousness is "downloaded" into the body of Vision, before being restored to his own body.[42] Quicksilver joins the team after learning that it is Wanda (Asgardian god Loki in disguise) who brought the team together.[43] After the events of the Secret Invasion storyline[44] the character is publicly exonerated of former crimes, with an unknown Skrull being blamed (although Hank Pym, Maximoff's daughter Luna, and Avengers butler Edwin Jarvis are aware of the lie). Quicksilver also resumes wearing his original green costume.[45] Quicksilver loses the respect of his daughter Luna when he lies to the Inhumans and claims that many of his past actions were actually perpetrated by a Skrull impostor,[46] although Pym tolerates the lie as he feels that Quicksilver deserves a chance to redeem himself.[47]

Quicksilver finally learns that the person he thought was his sister is actually Loki in disguise. Enraged, he and the rest of the team travel to the Isle of Silence to set a trap for the god of mischief. After imprisoning Loki in a device designed by Hank Pym, he begins torturing the god for information about Wanda's whereabouts. Loki offers no information about her and manages to contact Thor to beg for his help. Thor arrives and attacks Quicksilver for the way he is treating Loki. He is able to outrun the thunder god's lightning but is eventually overpowered.[48] He is one of the Avengers who joins Hercules, Amadeus Cho and their allies in an assault on Olympus Group Headquarters. He battles Amazon warrior women alongside Zeus[49] and helps a wounded Wolverine defeat the Huntsman, stabbing him through the chest with his own weapon.[50]

Quicksilver is later summoned by the Ghost using Amadeus Cho's technology, to defend Asgard against the Thunderbolts. He single-handedly defeats Mister X who is in possession of the Spear of Odin. Mr. X is not able to react quickly enough despite his abilities and Quicksilver viciously beats him down with a piece of debris.[51] He is seen alongside the other Avengers against the Void-possessed Sentry in the events of Siege.[52]

Avengers: The Children's Crusade[edit]

Quicksilver is searching for his sister in Wundagore when Magneto and the Young Avengers go to find the Scarlet Witch.[volume & issue needed] After trying to abduct his nephew Wiccan so he can assist him in finding his sister, he is stopped by his father and his other nephew, Speed.[volume & issue needed] After Wiccan suggests that maybe Magneto actually did want to make up for his past, he became angry and said, "Nephew the last time I allowed myself to believe that..... My father tried to kill me".[volume & issue needed] Quicksilver prepares to fight his father but when debris from his rampage strikes his sister it is found that the Scarlet Witch there is actually a Doombot in disguise.[volume & issue needed] The journey takes Quicksilver and his comrades all the way to Latveria so they rescue the Scarlet Witch.[volume & issue needed] After the Scarlet Witch turns herself into the X-Men and the Avengers a fight breaks out between the two groups.[volume & issue needed] After being knocked out along with all the other Avengers and X-Men by his sister, he is finally reunited with his sister.[53]

Heroic Age[edit]

Quicksilver joins the teaching staff of Avengers Academy to teach young students how to become heroes. He does so in order to distance himself from the legacy of his father Magneto.[54] One of the new students, Finesse, figures out that his story about being abducted by Skrulls is a lie. She blackmails him into giving her "private lessons" on everything he learned during his time with the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants.[55] Finesse convinces Quicksilver to help her search for the Taskmaster, who might be her biological father. After arriving at what they thought was an abandoned training camp, they found it still in use and quickly captured the criminals they found there. Quicksilver returned to the mansion and encountered Tigra, who was upset because some of the students assaulted the Hood on her behalf. During a heated exchange Quicksilver managed to convince her that kicking them out of Avengers Academy for trying to help would only turn them against becoming heroes.[56] At the new campus for the Avengers Academy (where the Faculty are offering to train other superpowered youths), Quicksilver is revealed to be mentoring Lightspeed as a teacher's assistant.[57]

In the miniseries "Magneto: Not a Hero", Joseph is resurrected under unknown circumstances and forms a new Brotherhood of Mutants with Astra and mutated deformed versions of Blob, Mastermind, Quicksilver, Scarlet Witch, and Toad. It is soon revealed that the mutated versions of Blob, Mastermind, Quicksilver, Scarlet Witch and Toad are clones created by Joseph.[58]

Quicksilver has joined the privately owned superhero team X-Factor.[59] When confronted during a press conference by Fatale over his actions meant to repower mutants and his lying about a Skrull having been responsible, Pietro finally admitted in public that he had been responsible and had tried to avoid facing the consequences; by doing this, he earned his daughter's love and respect back, and the two reconciled.[60]

Wanda and other heroes and villains experienced a moral inversion during a clash with the Red Onslaught.[61] Quicksilver and Magneto try to talk the inverted Wanda down, but when Wanda attacks them with a curse designed to punish her blood relatives that only affects Quicksilver, Wanda realizes that Magneto is not their biological father.[62]

Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch later take a trip to Counter-Earth.[63] After being tracked down and defeated by Luminous (a female who was created by the genetic material of Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver), Pietro and Wanda were brought to the High Evolutionary himself. He revealed to them that they are actually the long thought deceased children of Django and Marya Maximoff, Anna and Mateo. He also told them the truth where they were not mutants at all, but they had been experimented on by the High Evolutionary. After escaping from the High Evolutionary's experimentations, Pietro and Wanda located the Avengers Unity Division (who had traveled to the Counter-Earth looking for the twins) and helped the inhabitants of Lowtown (a refuge for the High Evolutionary's rejects) from their creator's assault.[64] After the High Evolutionary is defeated and he escapes into a portal with Luminous, Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch return to Earth with the Avengers Unity Division.[65]

All-New, All-Different Marvel[edit]

When the second superhero Civil War began, Pietro came to ask Wanda for help, but Wanda refused, because she and Pietro disagreed on which side was right - Pietro not liking the idea of profiling people based on what they might do and Wanda feeling that thinking about the future would have prevented many of their more dangerous mistakes in the past - past precedent made Wanda feel that introducing her powers to a conflict of this nature could be more dangerous than the existing situation, and she resented Pietro still trying to tell her what to do as though she was a child, bluntly informing him that his refusal to learn from his mistakes marked him as a sociopath. Wanda reveals to him that she is seeking answers about their true biological mother, Natalya Maximoff (who gave the twins to her relatives Marya and Django to spare them from a difficult life) and asks him to join her. He refuses and the two fight, although Wanda bests Quicksilver and tells him she never wants to see him again.[66] Natalya's spirit later summons Pietro during their final battle against a physical manifestation of Chaos. The twins reconcile after destroying the monster and Pietro is briefly able to meet his mother before she sacrifices herself to save witchcraft.[67] He has also been revealed to have fallen under the telepathic control of the Red Skull, acting as a 'sleeper agent' in the Avengers as part of the Skull's current campaign.[volume & issue needed]

During the "Secret Empire" storyline, Quicksilver appears as a member of the Underground which is a resistance movement against Hydra, following their take over of the United States.[68] Quicksilver and Hercules lead a strike force to find the Cosmic Cube fragments so that they can use it to restore Captain America and the country to normal.[69]

Marvel Legacy[edit]

During the "Avengers: No Surrender" storyline, Quicksilver is one of the heroes remaining in the cosmic game between Grandmaster and Challenger.[70] He is frozen because of Scarlet Witch’s attempt at reviving the frozen Vision,[71] but the process was later reversed.[72] He later uses his extreme agility and Scarlet Witch's powers to catch the beacon trapping his fellow Avengers, but in doing so he had pushed himself to the limit and apparently died.[73] But in the following mini-storyline of Quicksilver: No Surrender, it is revealed that he became stuck in an alternate dimension, ultimately getting himself free and returning to the Avengers.[74]

During the "Empyre" storyline, Quicksilver, Mockingbird, and Wonder Man deal with the Kree and the Skrull's fight with the Cotati near Navojoa. When Quicksilver is hit by special spheres fired by the Cotati magicians, Mockingbird and Wonder Man come to his aid and help the Kree and the Skrull turn the tide against the Cotati.[75] Quicksilver recovers his stamina and uses his super-speed to break up the fight and dispose of the Kree and Skrull weapons in the Gulf of California.[76]

During the "Blood Hunt" storyline, Quicksilver is among the superheroes that join Captain America's branch of the Avengers when it comes to fighting a vampire invasion.[77]

Powers and abilities[edit]

Quicksilver was presented as a mutant capable of moving and thinking at superhuman speeds. Capable of running at the speed of sound,[78] exposure to the High Evolutionary's Isotope E made it possible for the character to run at supersonic speeds of up to Mach 10 and resist the effects of friction, reduced oxygen, and kinetic impact while moving at super-speeds.[79][80] Also, he has a fast metabolism and can heal more rapidly than the average human.[79] His speed allows him to perform such feats as creating cyclone-strength winds and running up walls or across bodies of water.[79][81] Pietro's mind can perceive information with a photographic memory short term, becoming faster than the speed of thought, because he can shift his thoughts at a speed faster than normal thought.[82] Also, he can cause vibrations in his body to transfer to solid material and has superior agility and reflexes compared to other mutants.[82][83] It has been revealed that one of the reasons for his abrasive and impatient personality is that it seems to him that the rest of the world is moving in slow motion and that he is constantly waiting for it to catch up. As he once explained, "Have you ever stood in line at a banking machine behind a person who didn't know how to use it?... Now, imagine, Doctor, that everyone you work with, everywhere you go, your entire world is filled with people who can't work cash machines".[84]

Quicksilver lost his powers of speed when his sister removed most of his powers, but he gains new powers courtesy of the inhumans' Terrigen Mist. The mist gives Quicksilver the ability to displace himself out of mainstream time and space and "jump" into the future. He can summon several time-displaced duplicates of himself and appear to teleport by "jumping" into the future and then returning to the present at a new location.[85][86][38] By voluntarily embedding fragments of the Terrigen Crystals into his own body, he could empower former mutants with extreme versions of their superhuman abilities.[87] However, the effect was usually fatal.[87][88][38] The crystals were subsequently forced from his body by the mutant Rictor, leaving him without these abilities. After having a series of hallucinations, Quicksilver saw a woman in mortal danger and felt a desire to be a hero which made him regain his original powers in order to save the woman's life.[83] Later on, Quicksilver regained these enhanced powers of time "jumping" and temporal duplication for a while by physically imbedding the crystals into his flesh.[89]

It was later revealed that Quicksilver actually was a normal child that was put through several experiments by the High Evolutionary which granted his powers in the first place.[64]

Reception[edit]

Accolades[edit]

  • In 2006, IGN ranked Quicksilver 23rd in their "Top 25 X-Men Of All Time" list.[90]
  • In 2012, IGN ranked Quicksilver 44th in their "Top 50 Avengers" list.[91]
  • In 2016, Screen Rant ranked Quicksilver 6th in their "12 Fastest Superheroes Of All Time" list.[92]
  • In 2018, CBR.com ranked Quicksilver 10th in their "25 Fastest Characters In The Marvel Universe" list.[93]
  • In 2020, CBR.com ranked Quicksilver 5th in their "10 Greatest Speedsters In Comics" list.[94]
  • In 2021, Screen Rant ranked Quicksilver 3rd in their "10 Fastest X-Men In Marvel Comics" list.[95]
  • In 2021, Looper ranked Quicksilver 7th in their "Fastest Speedsters In History" list.[96]
  • In 2022, The A.V. Club ranked Quicksilver 71st in their "100 best Marvel characters" list.[97]
  • In 2022, Collider included Quicksilver in their "Top 5 Fastest Superheroes" list.[98]
  • In 2022, CBR.com ranked Quicksilver 8th and Ultimate Quicksilver 6th in their "20 Fastest Speedsters" list[99] and 7th in their "10 Scariest Avengers" list.[100]

Literary reception[edit]

Volumes[edit]

Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver - 2011[edit]

According to Diamond Comic Distributors, Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver #1 was the 148th best selling comic book in November 2011.[101][102]

Peyton Hinckle of ComicsVerse said, "Origin stories make superheroes. They tell us about a character's motivations, dreams, and memories. They're the perfect insight into why a character becomes a hero (or a villain). As readers, we need origin stories to understand the heroes we love. For a long time, Scarlet Witch and her brother Quicksilver had a half-formulated backstory. At first, they were just members of Magneto's brotherhood. But, eventually, they realized that they were also Magneto's children. The older comics don't give us an up-close look at Wanda's childhood, so in 2011 writer Sean McKeever tackled retelling Wanda and Pietro's story in a modern climate. The result was Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver, which finally gave readers the origin story they wanted. If you want to read about Scarlet Witch, but have no idea where to start, this is the issue for you."[103] George Marston of Newsarama ranked Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver 6th in their "The best Wanda Maximoff / Scarlet Witch stories of all time" list, asserting, "In comic books, Wanda and Pietro's time as villains was short-lived, and their prior history wasn't largely explored until years later, through glimpses and scattered stories. But 2011's Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch & Quicksilver takes a deeper dive into the histories of the titular heroes, showing their past and the lead-up to their time with the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants in a way that wasn't previously told on the page. Wanda and Pietro's history is one of the most unlikely backbones of the Marvel Universe, with their simple origins growing from a throughline between the X-Men and Avengers to the saga of a family tree that has branches throughout Marvel Comics, and Avengers Origins: Scarlet Witch & Quicksilver presents a concise and engaging take on their earliest days."[104]

Quicksilver: No Surrender - 2018[edit]

According to Diamond Comic Distributors, Quicksilver: No Surrender #1 was the 119th best selling comic book in May 2018.[105][106]

Joe Grunenwald of ComicsBeat asserted, "Quicksilver: No Surrender #1 is an entertaining first issue about a complicated protagonist. This series spins out of the events of Avengers: No Surrender, but is still perfectly accessible for new readers (like me), and only briefly mentions previous events before getting into its own story. It's a solid beginning for the series."[107] Joshua Davison of Bleeding Cool called Quicksilver: No Surrender #1 a "brilliant character-focused comic," saying, "Quicksilver: No Surrender #1 starts off on the right foot with a ponderous and self-reflective issue for Pietro Maximoff. Ahmed, Nguyen, and Renzi provide a compelling conflict for our hero with brilliant artwork and stunning color. This one gets a strong recommendation. Give it a read."[108] Aaron Berkowitz of ComicsVerse gave Quicksilver: No Surrender #1 a score of 90%, writing, "has amazing characterization. Ahmed writes Pietro near-flawlessly. The plot is also incredibly intriguing. I want to know how Pietro gets out of this mess. However, I wasn't a big fan of the art. Flip through the issue at your local comic shop and decide for yourself. For me, the writing was well worth the read, and may be well worth your $3.99."[109]

Other versions[edit]

JLA/Avengers[edit]

In the DC/Marvel crossover JLA/Avengers, Pietro first appears being brainwashed by Starro when the Avengers battle him. Thanks to a combination of Wanda's magic and Ms. Marvel's powers, they manage to get Starro's probe off of him.[110] When he and the other Avengers go to the DC Universe, he becomes fascinated with the Speed Force, seeking to empower by it and defeating The Flash (Wally West), but he fails twice. During the final battle in the Savage Land, he finally defeats the Flash, but only does so because there is no Speed Force in the Marvel Universe.[111] He makes an appearance in the final battle with Krona, but it is very brief. He also appears at the end as one of the heroes that started out the entire event.[112]

Marvel Zombies[edit]

In the limited series Marvel Zombies, Earth-2149 is contaminated with a virus that turns victims into flesh-eating zombies, with Quicksilver infected when bitten by a "zombified" Mystique (who at the time was impersonating his sister Wanda). This results in the rapid spread of the zombie virus, as Quicksilver is able to infect hundreds around the world in a short amount of time.[113] The character reappears in the limited series Marvel Zombies 3, revealed to be working for a "zombified" Wilson Fisk. Quicksilver is eventually lured into a trap by the Earth-616 Machine Man and subsequently destroyed.[114] The zombie virus spreads to a different Quicksilver in 'Earth Z', who is featured in the limited series Marvel Zombies Return. Here, his body is capable of operating independently of the head.[115]

Marvel Zombies Return[edit]

When the zombies from Earth-2149 cross over into Earth-Z, Quicksilver is transformed into a zombie, and in Marvel Zombies Return #5 is one of the few remaining zombies left who fought against Spider-Man and his New Avengers, attempting to steal a canister containing the 'cure' that Spider-Man had developed, only for the wall-crawler to accidentally pull Quicksilver's head off when trying to catch him with his webbing. He was killed by a cyborg Iron Man.[116]

Marvel 1602[edit]

Limited series Marvel 1602 depicts Quicksilver as Petros, the assistant (and secretly, son) of the High Inquisitor of the Spanish Catholic Church, Enrique.[117]

Ultimate Marvel[edit]

Ultimate Marvel features Quicksilver as Pietro Lensherr as the son of Magneto and a woman named Isabelle. As a teenager, he was capable of reaching speeds of Mach 10 and spent most of his life in the Savage Land. [118]

After he and his sister Wanda/Scarlet Witch, defected from their abusive father's Brotherhood of Mutant Supremacy, they joined the Ultimates for amnesty. During the Ultimate X-Men's Magnetic North story arc, he watched over his father while he was imprisoned in the Triskelion, and threatened to kill him.[119] In The Ultimates 3, he and his sister are apparently killed by Ultron; however, Quicksilver later resurfaced at the end of the Absolute Power story arc, and killed Moira MacTaggert.[120]

In Ultimatum #5, Quicksilver assassinated Cyclops as he is giving a speech at Washington, D.C., using the same bullet that was used to murder the Scarlet Witch.[121]

Following the deaths of major characters of the X-Men and the Brotherhood, Pietro began to search for new Brotherhood team members. Mystique, Sabretooth and Teddy (the son of Blob) joined him in Wundagore, along with an apparently reborn Wanda.[122]

Following his sister's orders, Quicksilver tried to help the White House, only resulting in the death of many mutants at the hands of Nimrod Model Sentinels, which were controlled by the Reverend Stryker before his death. When Pietro arrived in Egypt, he met his father, Erik, completely alive.[123] However, this was revealed to be an illusion from Sinister.[124] He attempts to manipulate his younger half-brother, Jimmy Hudson, but is defeated.[125]

Later, he helps Reed Richards assemble some of the Infinity Gems and joins his team of Dark Ultimates.[126] Quicksilver is fatally wounded after he turns against Richards and Kang, and chooses to die by Wanda's graveside.[127]

Pietro later appeared to have been somehow brought back to life. He witnessed an instance of the cosmic phenomenon known as an "incursion", the one which caused a collision between the planet Earth of his universe and that of an alternate reality, Earth-616, that resulted in the destruction of both universes.[volume & issue needed]

When the Multiverse was eventually rebuilt after the "Secret Wars" storyline, Quicksilver and the other foreign mutants, namely Jimmy, Nomi Blume aka Mach Two, Derek Morgan and Hisako Ichiki/Armor, were abducted by super-villain geneticist Miss Sinister, who brainwashed and turned them into her personal enforcers, the New Marauders. When Jimmy's natural resistance to telepathy allowed him to break free from Miss Sinister's control and he went rogue, the New Marauders were deployed to retrieve him. In the process, they confronted the Time-Displaced Original X-Men, who had tracked down Jimmy after he was detected by Cerebro.[128] Following a brief confrontation against the X-Men and Jimmy during which Marvel Girl learned of Miss Sinister's involvement, the New Marauders were ordered by their superior to leave.[129] Quicksilver later died due to the Mothervine experiments that was conducted on him where the other displaced mutants survived these experiments. The X-Men later found his body in one of Miss Sinister's abandoned laboratories.[130]

What If?[edit]

Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch appear in the What If? story "What If the X-Men Died on their First Mission?" as allies of Beast following the demise of the X-Men and upon the menace by Count Nefaria and his Ani-Men. Although invited to join the newly formed team upon the success of their mission, both decline in favor of their current commitments, although they promise their aid if they are needed.[131]

X-Men Noir[edit]

In the one-shot X-Men Noir, Peter Magnus is a former college track star, and works in the Homicide Department of the NYPD with his father: Eric Magnus, Chief Detective and the leader of The Brotherhood.[132]

In other media[edit]

Television[edit]

Film[edit]

Marvel licensed the filming rights of the X-Men and related concepts, such as mutants, to 20th Century Fox, who created a film series based on the franchise. Years later, Marvel started their own film franchise, the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), which focused on characters that they had not licensed to other studios, such as the Avengers (see below). As a result, Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch became part of a claims dispute between the two studios, with Fox citing the pair being mutants and children of Magneto and Marvel citing the pair's editorial history making them more closely associated with the Avengers rather than the X-Men. In time, the two studios came to an agreement, allowing each other to use the characters so long as Fox did not reference them as members of the Avengers and Marvel did not mention them as mutants or children of Magneto.[135] The arrangement became moot following the acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney - the parent company of Marvel Studios, and the confirmation that future X-Men films will take place within the Marvel Cinematic Universe.[136]

A character based on Quicksilver named Peter Maximoff appears in the Fox films X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014), X-Men: Apocalypse (2016), Deadpool 2 (2018), and Dark Phoenix (2019) portrayed by Evan Peters.[137][138][139][140][141] This version is an American teenager and an acquaintance of Logan's in the future. To demonstrate his super-speed, Days of Future Past director Bryan Singer shot all of Quicksilver's scenes in 3,600 frames per second.[142][143] Over the course of his appearances, Peter helps the X-Men fight Apocalypse before joining them and learns Magneto is his father, but chooses not to tell him.[144]

Marvel Cinematic Universe[edit]

In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), Pietro Maximoff is portrayed by Aaron Taylor-Johnson. He first appeared alongside his twin sister Wanda (Elizabeth Olsen) in a mid-credits scene for Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014), with the two subsequently appearing in leading roles in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015).[145][146][147] Pietro and Wanda seek revenge on Tony Stark, whose weapons killed their parents, by joining Hydra, who use the Mind Stone to grant them superhuman powers after they volunteer to be experimented on.[148] After Stark and the Avengers defeat the Hydra cell they were working with, the Maximoffs join forces with Ultron, only to learn he intends to kill all of humanity and defect to the Avengers to stop him. While thwarting his plot, Pietro dies while saving Hawkeye and a small child. Despite Taylor-Johnson signing a multi-picture deal,[149] producer Kevin Feige has stated that there are no plans for Pietro to appear in future films.[150] Following Disney's acquisition of Fox's film division, Taylor-Johnson was asked if he might return to the role, with the implication being that Evan Peters' competing version played a part in Feige's prior statement. While he expressed belief both parties were open to the possibility in the future, Taylor-Johnson reiterated that there were no immediate plans for him to reprise his role - specifically addressing speculation he would appear in the Disney+ series WandaVision.[151] Although Taylor-Johnson did not reprise his role in the series, the character would be referenced, with Gabriel Gurevich portraying him as a child in flashbacks to Wanda's childhood, while Peters portrays Ralph Bohner, a resident of Westview who is brainwashed by Agatha Harkness and forced to impersonate Pietro to get close to Wanda until he is freed by Monica Rambeau.[152]

Video games[edit]

Collected editions[edit]

Title Material collected Published date ISBN
Avengers: Quicksilver Quicksilver #1-13, Heroes for Hire (vol. 1) #15-16, and Heroes for Hire/Quicksilver Annual '98 March 2015 978-0785192930
Decimation: Son Of M Son of M #1-6 August 2006 978-0785119708
X-Factor Vol. 5: The Only Game In Town X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead and X-Factor (vol. 3) #28-32 December 2008 978-0785128632
Avengers: Mythos Avengers Origins: Quicksilver & The Scarlet Witch and Mythos: Hulk, Captain America; Avengers Origins: Ant -Man & the Wasp, Luke Cage, Vision, Thor January 2013 978-0785148609
Quicksilver: No Surrender Quicksilver: No Surrender #1-5 December 2018 978-1302912956

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External links[edit]