Yes, Metahumans are DC Comics equivalent to Marvel's mutants.
The X-men are unique in their way that they are caught in the middle of a million battles, most revolving around the fact that they are mutants and are being hunted, outcast, and killed for it. However, many teams of superheroes exist in the comic world, especially in Marvel Comics. The X-men also have had a couple of spin-off teams including Excalibur, X-Factor, and X-Force. There are also other teams of superheroes not relating directly to the X-men including the Avengers as one example. You can look up teams of superheroes on marvel.wikia.com .
Grand Database Comics...
dc comics
I count 714 Superman comics and 881 Superman comics.
The Smurfs - comics - was created in 1958.
There are well over a thousand heroes in Marvel Comics.
Well they are a team of mutants and they all have there own unique powers. Read the comics, they are great!
The writer of Marvels comic series was Kurt Busiek, the illustrator was Alex Ross and it was published in 1994 by the Marvel Comics company in 1994. It was released as a monthly limited series.
There are two Captain Marvels, one is a woman, one is a man. The female one's name is Carol Danvers, the male one's name is Mar-vell.
In Marvel Comics, the MRD mainly appear in X-men and other related titles. MRD stands for Mutant Response Division. They are a non-mutant law enforcement team sent out to detain mutants and keep them away from non-mutants. This usually results in a conflict with the X-men and the X-men usually save the day, freeing whoever was captured.
'Well, They Would Look at the world of remnant and are like, "This is disgusting! this is straight up disgusting...What Kind of Bull are you pulling on these people!"., and They would also probably offer asylum on the Island Nation of Krakoa, to, you know, The Faunus, because It's Literally like Mutants".
Probably Galactus, though topics like this are strong in Nerdrage and could be debated endlessly in comics forums. You didn't ask, but in DC ... I'd probably go with the Anti-Monitor.
Many Marvel Comics characters don't look human. You would really need to narrow down your search by title before anyone can really answer. Some reasons these characters may not look human are they are mutants, humans mutated in other ways, aliens, disguised, disfigured by accident, etc. I would suggest checking out marvel.wikia.com for all of your marvel comics character needs.
Jubilee is a fictional character appearing in comic books published by Marvel Comics. She was first introduced in 1989, so her age can be calculated by the number of years since then.
Currently, there's X-men, X-Force, X-Factor and the New Mutants. There's also the X-Club, but they're probably not going to be a team anymore since Beast quit.
Dr. Bolivar Trask is a fictional character who appears in some issues of Marvel Comics' X-Men comic book franchise. He is an opponent of the mutants and created the robot Sentinels to defend humankind against their powers.
The X-men are unique in their way that they are caught in the middle of a million battles, most revolving around the fact that they are mutants and are being hunted, outcast, and killed for it. However, many teams of superheroes exist in the comic world, especially in Marvel Comics. The X-men also have had a couple of spin-off teams including Excalibur, X-Factor, and X-Force. There are also other teams of superheroes not relating directly to the X-men including the Avengers as one example. You can look up teams of superheroes on marvel.wikia.com .