But 1990 wasn't his first appearance, and digging through my various piles of crap has unearthed some of his origins. I actually gave birth to Neutron in 1983, during boring 7th-grade classes. I was just discovering superhero comics proper, and I created dozens of characters, one of which was Neutron.
Basically a guy who's the center of a gigantic atom, he can use those electrons to stop bullets, kick you in the face, and according to my original sketch, destroy helicopters (since retconned out). By 9th grade, I was really deep in the Chris Claremont's X-Men, so Neutron was a mutant. In fact, he was a member of the Mutant Misfits, a one-shot comic I drew myself but that has since been lost to the ages. In '87, he was still a mutant and apparently his alter ego was ME:
Yep, that's the old registration card from Marvel's Fall of the Mutants crossover. Yeah. I registered. Let's just say my politics have since changed.Cue role-playing games. In 1989, my friend Rob Tam and I were fighting the dearth of RPGs on sale in our area by attempting to create our own superhero RPG. Like all our homemade games (fantasy and SF), it was a mishmash of various other games' stats we'd gotten out of old Dragon magazines and was totally unbalanced. Neutron was revamped (first appearance of the first picture in this post) as a scientist called Michael Stern (after Roger) who got shrunk into a black hole-making machine which transformed him into the hero we now know. I had this whole supporting cast for him, which Rob promptly killed off in the first "issue". That was just the way he rolled.
I think Neutron was much better off as an NPC in the DCH games that followed (and that continue to this day), though I did try to give him a go as a PC after buying GURPS Supers in '91.
Like 75% of role-playing projects, it just never happened, and this 250-point version of Neutron never saw the light of day. No problem though, he's still active and I guess my longest-running character (now on his fourth player group). Missile Man, Jello Woman and Super-E.T. can't say that.
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