Marvel Comics Introduces T’Challa’s White Son Ketema As Future Black Panther And King Of Wakanda - After defeating his father and proclaiming “I am king now. Wakanda is MINE!”, the new blonde-haired, white-skinned Black Panther proceeds to remove his mask and reveals himself to his new subjects.

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Ketema reveals himself in Marvel Knights: The World To Come Vol. 1 #1 (2025), Marvel Comics. Words by Joe Quesada and Christopher Priest, art by Joe Quesada and Richard Isanove.

In a move that is sure to cause the exact explosion of discourse it was intended to, Marvel Comics has kicked off their latest visit to their Marvel Knights imprint with the revelation that at some point in the near future of Earth-616, T’Challa will find himself challenged for both Wakandan Throne and the Black Panther by its heir apparent – his blonde-haired, white-skinned son, Ketema.

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Wakanda finds itself on the precipice of an uprising on Joe Quesada and Richard Isanove’s cover to Marvel Knights: The World To Come Vol. 1 #1 (2025), Marvel Comics

Unbelievable as it may seem, this twist to Wakanda’s canon was confirmed in the debut issue of Christopher Priest and Joe Quesada’s new Marvel Knights: The World To Come miniseries.

The latest title in the Marvel Knights imprint, as originally created by Quesada to denote those books that were a bit too ‘edgy’ for the publisher’s general audience, The World To Come flings readers into the near future of the Marvel Universe to find a Wakanda embroiled in political unrest as a new resistance group known as the Aquamarines wages an ongoing coup attempt against the country’s traditional ruling regime.

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The Dora Milaje raid an Aquamariner resistance camp in Marvel Knights: The World To Come Vol. 1 #1 (2025), Marvel Comics. Words by Joe Quesada and Christopher Priest, art by Joe Quesada and Richard Isanove.

As to how the world’s most advanced nation found itself in such a state of disarray, it is soon revealed that the heart-shaped dominoes began to fall when its current king, T’Challa, is met with a formal combat challenge for the throne by a son Ketema, a formidable masked warrior who has found himself fed up with his father’s indifference towards his people’s autonomy.

Though he easily proves himself the more competent warrior, T’Challa finds himself unable to bring the challenge to an end, as thanks to his son’s adamant refusal to voluntarily surrender, the only way to do so would require him to outright kill Ketema.

Mistaking his father’s mercy as patronization, Ketema ultimately brings things to a close after he flies into a rage, in doing so taking his father by surprise and dropping him with a brutal three-hit combo.

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Ketema puts a decisive end to his father’s reign in Marvel Knights: The World To Come Vol. 1 #1 (2025), Marvel Comics. Words by Joe Quesada and Christopher Priest, art by Joe Quesada and Richard Isanove.

With T’Challa unable to stand, Ketema turns to the elders of Wakanda and formally declares himself the country’s new top cat.

Proclaiming “I am king now. Wakanda is MINE!”, the new Black Panther proceeds to remove his mask and reveal himself to his new subjects.

And much to their surprise, rather than a black-skinned African, T’Challa’s son sports far paler skin and blonder hair than his fellow countrymen.


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Ketema declares himself the new King of Wakanda in Marvel Knights: The World To Come Vol. 1 #1 (2025), Marvel Comics. Words by Joe Quesada and Christopher Priest, art by Joe Quesada and Richard Isanove.


At current, outside of his existence, physical appearance, and hatred of his father, no further details have been presented regarding Ketema’s background.

Notably, the issue reveals that at some point following his divorce from X-Men mainstay Storm, T’Challa reunited with his first fiancé, Monica Lynne, and the two eventually became pregnant.

Given Ketema’s complexion, it seems unlikely that Monica, a Black woman, is his actual father.

Thus, current speculation suggests that the new King of Wakanda may by T’Challa’s son by another, yet-to-be-introduced woman, or an orphan he adopted and brought into his legacy à la Batman and his various Robins.

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T’Challa attempts to assuage Monica’s romantic doubts in Marvel Knights: The World To Come Vol. 1 #1 (2025), Marvel Comics. Words by Joe Quesada and Christopher Priest, art by Joe Quesada and Richard Isanove.

It should also be noted that, in regards to the canon status of Ketema and his time ruling over Wakanda, the exact classification of Marvel Knights: A World to Come is a bit complicated.

While every book that has thus far released under the Marvel Knights banner has been set firmly in Earth-616, the fact that A World to Come takes place at a vague point in the future.

To this end, as explained by Priest himself in an interview with AIPT Comics, “Our Black Panther is our world to come. It’s completely our own vision of the near future. It is not tied into any other bit of Marvel continuity, which gives us enormous freedom to do things like have Lockjaw show up, so we’re very happy about that.”

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T’Challa finally goes to join his ancestors in Marvel Knights: The World To Come Vol. 1 #1 (2025), Marvel Comics. Words by Joe Quesada and Christopher Priest, art by Joe Quesada and Richard Isanove.

Ultimately, more information regarding Ketema’s history, canon status, and tenure as Black Panther will come to light when Marvel Knights: The World To Com Vol. 1 #2 hits shelves on July 9th.

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Idk Black Panther is the most dull boring superhero; just a guy in a suit.

At least batman has gadgets and cool villains.

Black Panther movie was two cgi puppets fighting poorly
 
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Idk Black Panther is the most dull boring superhero; just a guy in a suit.

At least batman has gadgets and cool villains.

Black Panther movie was two cgi puppets fighting poorly

To compensate for Black Panther.

The scum running the MCU turned the superior King known as Namor into a illegal alien.
 
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Man, that art is shockingly bad. I'm honestly baffled by the fact that modern day comic books still have enough of an audience for the whole thing to be an "industry".
Both Marvel and DC are just IP farms for their parent company's film and TV divisions. Their comics make a loss and have done for decades, they're just a relatively cheap way of keeping certain characters and stories in print so the rights don't revert back to the original creators or their estates, which used to be a common clause in work-for-hire contracts.
 
Christopher Priest is hilarious. In his original Black Panther run, one of the major characters was T'Challa's adopted brother, who was a hardcore Wakandan ultra-nationalist, wet works dude, and also a white man.

He also made fun of people who treated the character as some symbol of black American pride, when T'Challa is from a foreign nation, and isn't even pan-African, because his step mom is treated like shit from being from the 'wrong' part of Africa.
Chris Priest left comics for awhile because the only jobs people would assign him were writing black superheroes. He didn't want to be pigeonholed as Black Writer who Writes Black Characters, or rather if he did write for a title about a black character he wanted it to be by his choice.

He had gotten jerked around by publishers more than once, like how DC offered him a new gig writing for the hero Firestorm, and no one told him till he got to the meeting that Firestorm had just been replaced with a black legacy character. Priest was so peeved by this he left and didn't come back to DC until he got a gig writing the Deathstroke title that started in 2016. Said title also featured a character Priest created who was like an evil pastiche of Black Panther: Matthew Bland aka "Red Lion", armor suit-wearing genocidal President-for-Life of the nation of Buredunia. "Red Lion" was also, from what I've heard Priest utilizing some of the ideas he never got to use for his run on BP.

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Priest has gotten up to shenanigans with his Black Adam maxi-series at DC:

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Though as far as his work goes, I have a fondness for his series "Quantum and Woody", which was published by Acclaim back when, cancelled back when, with a couple of revivals, including a sequel mini-series by the original creators. The idea was that two former friends, a salt-and-pepper duo accidentally become bonded together thanks to an accident that gives them strange powers, but requires they clang the special wristbands they have to wear together once every 24 hours or else they'll dissipate into quantum energy. Of course, they decide to become superheroes, Eric "Quantum" Henderson, a rich black guy raised in the Connecticut suburbs, ex-military, who despite initial skepticism takes to costumed vigilantism like a duck to water. His former friend Woodrow "Woody" Van Chelton, is white and came from the same background, but thanks to his father abandoning he and his mother, found himself in impoverished circumstances in his teens and ended up having to survive on the streets. Now, thanks to their circumstances, as Mr. Priest put it: "These two guys, who get on each others' nerves, can never live more than a half-day's drive from one another."

It was pretty sharp and funny in a way many more modern "humorous" comics with their MCU-style slop quips are not. Like addressing how there were certain words Priest and Co. weren't allowed to use, and having to come up with some substitute words.

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Low-hanging fruit, but still smart if they play it straight and be like "You guys always memed about a White Black Panther, well, here he is!" That'd give giving libtards ammunition ("See? It's no big deal that every character you love is a race swapped gay nigger because this happened!") and might shut up conservatives.

However, if he's a typical white villain oppressing niggers then it's just more lazy woke shit.
 
I love people coping about it being racist or white people ruining everything when it's literally a black man who wrote this character :story:

At this point, literally why the fuck not a white Black Panther?

We've had a black Captain America, a black Spider-Man, a female Thor, a Muslim Captain Britain, why, suddenly, would this particular ethnic switch be any different? Why are the sort of people who are usually all for these sorts of changes suddenly incredibly upset about this particular change? 🤔
 
but why does T'Challa, himself, look Sicilian here?
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Search your feelings. You know it to be true.
Maybe he’ll be an albino and have to fend off attacks from other tribes who want to use his body parts for traditional medicine to cure some new sci fi alien disease or something
Well, certainly explains Raiden's fondness for limb-slicing and mass murder even more than growing up as an African child soldier normally would. He had to either become the ripper or suffer as the ripee.
 
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