Scott   Lobdell wrote both Uncanny   X-Men and X-Men during the 1990s. He also launched Generation   X and Adventures of   Cyclops and Phoenix, and penned Alpha Flight and Fantastic Four. Elsewhere, he wrote   Dark Horse’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer with Fabian Nicieza, Wildstorm’s Gen13, Top Cow’s Darkness, and IDW’s Ghostbusters: Displaced   Aggression and Galaxy   Quest. Lobdell scripted Stan Lee’s animated film Mosaic and has performed as a   stand-up comedian.
New   York Times best-selling author Mark   Waid has worked for every major company in the   comics industry in a nearly three-decade-long career, writing thousands of   issues, including runs of Amazing Spider-Man, X-Men, Ka-Zar and Fantastic   Four. His other works of note include his   collaboration with painter Alex Ross on Kingdom   Come, which earned an Eisner Award for Best   Limited Series. Waid enjoyed his greatest outpouring of critical acclaim with   the Eisner Award-winning Daredevil — which included a revered collaboration with frequent   artistic partner Chris Samnee. He later took on such diverse pop-cultural   icons as Princess Leia and Archie, and ushered in a new era of greatness for   Earth’s Mightiest Heroes in All-New, All-Different   Avengers. His Marvel work continued with Avengers, Black   Widow, Captain America, Champions   and Doctor Strange.
Since   his start on the New Universe’s Psi-Force and backup stories in Classic X-Men, Fabian Nicieza has written most of Marvel’s major super-teams — including   Alpha Flight, the Avengers, the New Warriors, the Thunderbolts and the X-Men.   Together with artist Rob Liefeld, Nicieza transformed New Mutants into the blockbuster X-Force. The writer also tackled   solo heroes ranging from Cable and Deadpool (later combined in Cable & Deadpool) to Gambit and   Nomad. He edited Marvel’s Star imprint, contributed to multititle X-events   like “X-Cutioner’s Song” and “Phalanx Covenant,” and wrote various   “pre-modern” limited series such as Adventures of   Captain America and Citizen   V and the V-Battalion. Elsewhere, he has written   both JLA and Justice League Adventures, The 99, Turok, X-Files,   and others.
Artist   Roger Cruz got his start as a   comic-book letterer in his native Brazil, lettering American comics for the   Brazilian market. In the early ’90s, Cruz joined Art & Comics   International, an association that introduced a stable of talented Brazilian   artists to the American comics scene. Cruz’s work was soon seen in dozens of   Marvel titles, including Generation X, X-Factor,   Uncanny X-Men, X-Man and   Ghost Rider. Cruz’s career reached a highpoint in   1995 with the release of X-Men Alpha, a one-shot that became the highest-selling comic book of the   year for Marvel Comics. With more than one hundred Marvel comics to his   credit, in 1997 Cruz focused his attentions to launching The Comic Book   Factory (Fábrica de Quadrinhos), a Brazilian art school and studio dedicated   to educating a new generation of comic-book artists. After a two-year   teaching run, Cruz made his long-awaited return to American comics with a   revival of Amazing Fantasy, featuring a new teenaged Latina heroine, Araña. After   completing the eight-issue X-Men: First Class series, Cruz continues to be a popular contributor to comics   in both the United States and Brazil.
Having   begun his career on G.I. Joe,   Eisner Award-nominated artist Ron Garney is known for well-received runs on Captain   America and Amazing   Spider-Man. He has teamed with writer Jason Aaron   on Wolverine, Wolverine Weapon X and Ultimate Captain America. Garney has   also contributed design work to such films as Will Smith’s I Am Legend and Nicolas Cage’s The Sorcerer’s Apprentice. His later   Marvel work includes Uncanny X-Force and a collaboration with Charles Soule on Daredevil. Garney reunited with   Aaron on Thor: God of Thunder and then the creator-owned Men of   Wrath for Marvel’s Icon imprint.
After   an artistic apprenticeship under famed father Joe Kubert, Andy   Kubert got his start on DC’s space-opera   variations Adam Strange   and Warlord, as well as   the best-selling crossover Batman vs. Predator in collaboration with brother Adam. Kubert’s Marvel career   began with a six-year stint on X-Men — continuing into Thor, Ka-Zar,   Ghost Rider and others.   He collaborated with Orson Scott Card on Ultimate   Iron Man, Neil Gaiman on Marvel   1602 and Paul Jenkins on Wolverine:   Origin.