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From the comic book where he was born to his showing off his powers and time traveling around the Marvel Universe, here are the best Franklin Richards stories in Marvel Comics history.
10) Fantastic Four Annual #6

The first appearance of Franklin Richards in the Marvel Universe was when he was born. In Fantastic Four Annual #6, the Fantastic Four were in the Negative Zone, and the Invisible Woman was pregnant. The reason they went to the Negative Zone was that Susan was having a tough pregnancy thanks to the cosmic rays in her body, and Reed knew there was something called Element X there that could save her. They found Annihilus while there, and Reed knew that Element X was in his Cosmic Control Rod. However, since Annihilus relies on the rod to stay alive, and he has an irrational fear of death, they had to fight him for it. Reed managed to get it and siphoned some out to save her, which allowed Susan to give birth to a healthy Franklin Richards. However, this made Annihilus a Fantastic Four enemy for life, and Franklin was born with immense powers.
9) Fantastic Four #140-141

One of the biggest Franklin Richards stories as a child came in Fantastic Four #140-141. Susan was away from the team at this time, and Medusa had taken her place. However, the story begins with Sue informing Reed that something is wrong with Franklin. Before they can meet up, Agatha Harkness intervenes, taking Susan and Franklin under her protection. However, they all end up captured by Annihilus. By the end of the story, Reed is finally able to help rescue his son from the monster. However, when he sees Franklin’s eyes glowing and realizes the power the child possesses, he takes a device he made and blasts Franklin into a coma to prevent his powers from overwhelming him. This was one of the worst things Reed Richards ever did, and Susan angrily takes Franklin and leaves him, while The Thing says the Fantastic Four are officially finished.
8) Fantastic Four #376

In Fantastic Four #376, things changed completely for Franklin Richards (although it was not going to last). Reed’s father, Nathaniel Richards, showed up and revealed that he had traveled into the future, where he had seen events unfolding that all involved Franklin. While his family trusted him at first, they realized too late that Nathaniel had plans to take Franklin away from them, and it was an all-out fight that the Fantastic Four lost. Nathaniel escaped through a portal with Franklin, and before the team could figure out how to give chase, the portal reopened, and a teenage Franklin showed up, having been raised in the future and now back with powers of his own. This, it turned out, was an alternate Earth version of Franklin and would be undone later, but it started a new journey for the hero.
7) Fantastic Force

Before the young Franklin returned to Earth-616, the teenage Franklin had some big adventures. Nothing was bigger for the second-generation Marvel Comics hero than his series, Fantastic Force (1994). This series showed how powerful Franklin was since Nathaniel trained him. Taking on the name Psi-Lord, he formed this new team when the Fantastic Four broke up, and they replaced the FF in defending the world from threats. On top of Franklin, the team also included a young Wakandan warrior named N’Kano, an Inhuman named Devlor, and Huntara, someone from Franklin’s otherworldly future. Financed by Black Panther, they had several adventures, including against AIM, Klaw, and Morgan Le Fay.
6) Daydreamers

Daydreamers was a three-issue miniseries from 1996 that saw Franklin Richards (as a young child again) alone on Earth after the Fantastic Four and Avengers all died in their battle with Onslaught. While the FF got a reboot in the Heroes Reborn universe, Franklin ended up being sent to Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters to learn to control his mutant powers. While there, he met two other kids (Artie Maddicks and Leech) and they ended up creating a team known as the Daydreamers alongside Tana Nile, Howard the Duck, and Man-Thing. This series sees them involved in adventures in a strange world, which turns out to be one Franklin created himself. This series explored trauma and Franklin’s loss of everything, and it was incredibly poignant at the time.













