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Wolverines & Deadpools #1 has its problems, but one of the coolest parts of the book is a Deadpool deep cut that many newer fans of the character have no idea about. As Wolverine and Deadpool hunt for clues, they find themselves confronted by a foe who knows Deadpool very well — Agent X. Agent X is an interesting story in and of himself, his creation opening the doors on another era at Marvel. It’s a story that involves Deadpool co-creator Rob Liefeld, as well as the realities of what made books sell in the early ’00s.
Agent X Was a Way to Cash In on the X-Men’s Fame

So, Deadpool came to prominence in the ’90s, and eventually got his own solo ongoing series. Deadpool was fairly popular for a while, but eventually started to fade away, especially after writer Joe Kelly left the book. Deadpool kept falling down the sales charts, but that wasn’t the only problem — Rob Liefeld was vocal about royalties that he thought Marvel owed him for X-Force, Cable, and Deadpool. Liefeld denied this, but whatever happened, it resulted in Deadpool, Cable, and X-Force to be rechristened Agent X, Soldier X, and X-Statix. At the time, Marvel claimed they were doing it to more closely tie these books to the X-Men comics, hoping that putting an X on the cover would make fans pick these books up. Of course, this was an asinine idea, and most fans didn’t believe Marvel or Liefeld’s protestations about why they changed the titles of these books. The books sold somewhat well, but eventually, the whole thing would be used as yet another joke in the history of Deadpool.









