
Storm
Ororo Munroe
First Appearance
Giant-Size X-Men #1 (1975)
Powers & Abilities
Teams
Also Known As
Beautiful Windrider, Bloodstorm, Goddess of the Plains, High Priestess, La Reine Storm, Mistress of the Elements, Headmistress Ororo, Mutate #20, Orordius, Ororo Iqadi T'Challa, Ororo Komos Wakandas, Ororo Munroe, Queen Ororo, Weather Witch, White Queen, Thor, Hadari Yao, Wind-Rider, Ororo-Bug
About Storm
Ororo Munroe — better known as Storm — made her landmark debut in Giant-Size X-Men #1 (1975), one of the most consequential single issues in Marvel history. That oversized comic introduced the "All-New, All-Different" X-Men lineup and is an absolute cornerstone of any serious Marvel collection. Storm's arrival on the scene brought something the team had never seen before: a regal, awe-inspiring presence whose mastery over weather made her one of the most visually dramatic mutants in the Marvel Universe. Her background as a goddess-worshipped figure in Africa and a street thief in Cairo layered her with a complexity that immediately set her apart from her teammates.
Over the decades, Storm has anchored some of the most celebrated X-Men story arcs ever put to print. Collectors prize her solo spotlight moments in the classic Claremont era, including her unforgettable mohawk transformation period of the early 1980s — a bold character reinvention that shocked readers and became iconic. Her brutal victory over Cyclops in Uncanny X-Men #201, winning team leadership without her powers, cemented her as one of Marvel's greatest characters. The classic Storm limited series from 1996 and her later solo runs further explored her mythology, while her marriage to Black Panther in the mid-2000s tied her legacy to Wakanda and expanded her importance across the Marvel universe.
The Krakoa era brought yet another renaissance for Ororo. Her roles on the Quiet Council, the Marauders, and later as a central figure in the Arakko saga elevated her to cosmic and political heights rarely seen for any mutant outside of Xavier or Magneto. The Planet-Size X-Men: Krakoa one-shot and her leadership threads running through the Marauders ongoing series are essential modern reads. Her alias "Hadari Yao" — meaning "Walker of Clouds" — became a rallying cry for fans who had long argued she deserved the spotlight treatment she finally received.
For collectors, Storm's key issues run deep and wide. Giant-Size X-Men #1 remains a grail book in any grade, and her appearances throughout the Claremont-Byrne and Claremont-Silvestri runs of Uncanny X-Men are perennial back-issue targets. The character's sheer longevity, iconic visual design, and ever-expanding story significance make her one of the safest and most rewarding focuses in the hobby. Whether you are chasing high-grade Bronze Age keys, variant covers from her Krakoa-era solo series, or a complete run of her limited series appearances, Storm's bibliography rewards collectors at every level.













