Warning: Contains spoilers for Deadpool #6!There are plenty of Marvel heroes who don’t mind using lethal force, and the deadliest of them all is Wade Wilson. Deadpool. Deadpool destroys hundreds if not thousands of his enemies using a truly impossible variety of weapons, from everyday firearms to grenades that unleash the man-eating cockroach. But ace Wade Wilson’s successor took overHe is claiming that they hold back their lethal potential.




When Deadpool passes the mantle to his daughter, he decides to give her a surprising new rule to live by. Although Deadpool has never had a problem with killing people, he has made it clear to both his daughter Ellie and his trainer Taskmaster that he does not want him to use lethal force under any circumstances.

Deadpool refuses to kill his daughter

like a story Deadpool kills the Marvel Universe And Deadpool kills Deadpool Make it clear how much Deadpool was, and still is, tied to lethality Years of taking a life made Wade Wilson truly miserable. It’s clear that despite allowing her to use his name, she doesn’t want Ellie to go down the same path. His desire for Ellie to avoid using lethal force goes so far that Wade even begins training and using Ellie with a blunt shock knife, so that Ellie is not equipped to take a life. As soon as this decision is made, Wade is killed, making it his last wish, which means If the new Deadpool takes a life, he will betray his father.


Eli’s Deadpool suit features Kevlar armor and fireproof material, giving him extra protection that hopefully won’t violate his ‘no kill’ restriction.


This new Deadpool is different from his father

Deadpool #6 By Cody Ziegler, Rose Antonio, Guru-EFX and Joe Sabino

Taskmaster takes the new Deadpool on a mission


Ellie recently revealed her mutant powers, developing a healing factor of her own. However, his powers have a unique application – his healing suppresses his mind and body, allowing him to develop new skills at a much faster rate than normal humans. With Deadpool still injured from his previous fight with the mysteriously empowered Death Grip, he agrees to allow Ellie to accompany the Taskmaster and his symbiote ‘daughter’ Princess on the mercenary mission he booked. However, on Ellie’s first mission, the Death Grip returns to finish off Deadpool, leaving her the Marvel Universe’s one and only Mar with a Mouth.

One of the most consistent parts of Deadpool’s character has always been his care for his daughter and his desire to be better than her. Deadpool has killed hundreds of people with ease, because the truth is, he’s just not the best guy. This is something he willingly admits. But Deadpool doesn’t want that for his daughter – it’s one of the reasons she’s been out of his life for so long, protecting her from afar. Now that he’s taking up the mantle, Wade just wants him to be better than him.


Eli is on his way to becoming a better Deadpool

By avoiding murder, he becomes a true hero

Every parent wants their child to have a better life than they had. Wade is a character who has a great deal of self-loathing for his actions and has been scorned by the superhero community because of them in the past. Because of this, Wade tried to walk hard to train his daughter to use her powers instead of becoming the same deadly mercenary.


Sadly, it’s possible that Deadpool’s death will fill Eli with enough rage to ignore his promise, and while Taskmaster is a great trainer, he’s no more a moral paragon than Deadpool. Wade Wilson wanted his daughter to resist taking life with her new powers, setting new ones Deadpool A challenge he may struggle to meet.

Deadpool #6 On sale now from Marvel Comics!

Deadpool in comic cover art

Deadpool

Appeared in the first issue with Mercy Face New Mutants in 1990, and has since had its own series and a massive cult following. With his incredible powers of healing and regeneration, Deadpool was initially portrayed as an X-Men villain but later evolved into an anti-hero. After getting his own movie series that started in 2016, the third Deadpool movie finally brings the intelligent, fourth-wall-breaking character to the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

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