Tabitha Smith | |
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Tabitha Smith on the cover to Weapon X #11.
Art by Georges Jeanty. |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Secret Wars II #5 (November 1985) |
Created by |
Jim Shooter (writer) Al Milgrom (artist) |
In-story information | |
Full name | Tabitha Smith |
Species | Human Mutant |
Team affiliations |
Fallen Angels X-Terminators New Mutants Underground X-Force Nextwave X-Men |
Notable aliases | Time Bomb, Boom-Boom, Boomer, Meltdown, Firecracker, Mutate #35 |
Abilities | Creates variably-sized orbs of pure psionic energy that explode with concussive and destructive force |
Tabitha Smith is a fictional character, a mutant superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Jim Shooter and Al Milgrom, the character first appeared in Secret Wars II #5 (November 1985). She then appeared as a member of X-Force and later as a member of Nextwave. Since her first appearance, Tabitha has used a number of different codenames, including Time Bomb, Boom-Boom, Boomer, and Meltdown. Tabitha is one of the mutants to have kept her powers after the 2005 "House of M" storyline.
Created by Jim Shooter and Al Milgrom, the character first appeared in Secret Wars II #5 (November 1985), in which she and the Beyonder are the primary characters. She next appears as a main character in the 1987 limited series Fallen Angels. This led to her becoming a supporting character in the X-Factor series beginning with issue #11, which then led to a co-star role in the X-Terminators limited series. Following this series, she appeared in The New Mutants, initially guest-starring as a member of the X-Terminators, and eventually becoming a member of the titular group. The team then became X-Force and she remained a member of the team for most of the X-Force series. Sometime later, she appears as a member of Nextwave throughout the Nextwave series. Writer Warren Ellis said that he picked Boom-Boom to be in Nextwave because Boom-Boom is his favorite super hero name in the history of comics for its sheer oddness and silliness, and he loved it when she was in Uncanny X-Men when Joe Madureira was the artist.