Hurt and humiliated, Juston returns to the Sentinel, contemplating using it for revenge. The bullies that had plague Juston hurt one of his friends and turn Jessie against him with by lying that Juston was gossiping that the pair had "hooked-up". He programs the Sentinel to not hurt anybody before installing the final component, and creates a harness for himself and goes on an adventure with the Sentinel. However, Juston soon discovers the Sentinel's original purpose while searching online and coming across an article featuring the X-Men. Initially frightened by the discovery, he begins to assist the rebuilding from scrap metal and reprogramming it the two form something of a bond. A few days after the event, Just discovers the battle bot and the half re-built Sentinel in his junkyard. Soon after, Juston fell for fellow student Jessie Ingram. During the battle the robot disappears into the junkyard unbeknownst to Juston, the processor was actually the remains of a giant robot programmed to exterminate mutants: a Sentinel. One day Juston finds a micro-processor which he then places into a ' Battle-Bot' that he and his friends use. Being poor, Juston must find his own fun, and spends the days playing in the salvage yard or constructing robots from spare parts. He lives with his younger brother Chris and his father Peter, who operates a junkyard adjacent to their house his mother walked out on the family years ago. Juston Seyfert is an ordinary human teenager tormented by the seniors at Antigo High School in Wisconsin. A second series returned in November 2005, this time as a five-issue limited series. The series ran for 12 issues before being cancelled. Art duties were handled by Udon Studios Eric Vedder, Joe Vriens and Scott Hepburn worked on the series. Īs with other Tsunami titles, the series was structured in six-issue plot arcs, which would then be issued in digest-sized low-price trade paperbacks soon after single issue publication. Editor Marc Sumerak worked on the pitch with McKeever. However, he did suggest that a "third-string mutant" might be an interesting guest character in future arcs. McKeever himself was born in Wisconsin, and would later create another Marvel character from the state, the superhero Gravity, feeling it was important to have characters spread out geographically. McKeever felt the series was a teen drama with fantasy elements, and felt the story wasn't an X-Men spin-off "in any real sense", and purposefully sited Sentinel in remote Wisconsin to avoid crossing over. Sean McKeever was considered a rising star in the industry at the time by Marvel editor-in-chief Joe Quesada. Despite featuring a different style to most of the company's other work at that point and some uncharacteristic story ideas, Sentinel and its fellow Tsunami titles were still part of the Marvel Universe. The imprint was the idea of Marvel editor C. Sentinel was originally launched in 2003 as one of the seven titles that launched Marvel Comics' Tsunami imprint of manga-influenced series. The story concerns a young boy called Juston Seyfert who finds and befriends a mutant-hunting Sentinel robot. It was written by Sean McKeever and illustrated by UDON. Sentinel is a comic book series published by Marvel Comics as part of the Tsunami imprint. The cover of Sentinel #1, art by Eric Vedder
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