The episode opens with the MRD vehicles chasing a young mutant, Magma, through the streets trying to arrest her. The more scared she gets, the more her heat/lava powers flare out of control. Wolverine is able to show up at the right moment to save her, and uses a strange collar to stop her powers from flaring out of control. It reminded me a bit of the original X-MEN LEGENDS opening plot, especially since that was where Blum first voiced Wolverine. I still wonder how Magma is able to make flaming footprints without melting her shoes (she burns off half her clothes later). A strange woman and a cabal of thieves admire the collar and hire the titular Gambit to steal it.
Gambit's design is as complicated and stuck in the 90's as possible: trench, non-mask, color clashing armor. They added some metal shoulder-protectors to the coat. He debuted in 1990 and was still a very new character when he was part of the cast of the original X-MEN cartoon in 1992-1993; in fact, many credit that show with helping to launch Gambit into A-List status during the 90's. He was a staple of the comics for many years during that decade and had at least two ongoing series. It was only after the Joe Q EIC tenure started in 2000 that he started to slow down and lose some steam. By 2008, while Gambit still has a lot of fans, he isn't nearly as big a character or as vital to the comic universe as he was before the year 2000.
While Gambit was part of the central cast of the X-MEN cartoon, and he had his own solo episode in Season 2, Gambit, along with Jubilee, often spent many episodes away from the team compared to other characters like Wolverine, Beast, Rogue, even Cyclops. In some ways he was more of an enigmic and rare figure than even the "loner", Wolverine. He showed up at the end of Season Two of X-MEN EVOLUTION as one of Magneto's personal Acolytes, and had some distinctive episodes in Season Three and Four of that show. Much as in the comics, all versions of cartoon Gambit have fallen for Rogue at some point. Ironically, in the first two seasons of X-MEN, Gambit did have an interesting rapport with Jubilee, but Wolverine soon became her de facto mentor.
To be blunt, I have never been a fan of Gambit. I usually dismissed him as a child watching the original cartoon, and as I got older, he started to irritate me more. Maybe it was the "trapped in the 90's" design (much as Longshot had a "trapped in the 80's" design), or the annoying accent, or the fact that I wondered why Rogue put up with him. Maybe he seemed to be trying too hard to be cool to me. I didn't mind the EVOLUTION version, though. His design was a bit toned down and he wasn't constantly spouting, erm, "High School French" as THE TICK would call it, chere, every five seconds, mon ami.
This version of Gambit, much like in EVOLUTION, is not a member of the X-Men. In fact, this one is still a player for the Thieve's Guild, working for hire. It is an interesting way to play him, to keep him as a neutral professional type rather than attaching him as an outright hero or villain. In the comics, that was how he started before befriending Storm, after all (a former thief herself). His design here is a bit complicated, and in a way I am glad he is not on the core cast as he and Cyclops would clash horribly (I could imagine "Trenchcoat Mafia" wisecracks). The worst part about him I would say is his voice; it was a little inconsistent. Sometimes he sounded fine here, and other times his Cajun sounded like he came from Nu Joysey. Some of his lines were almost unbearable, such as, "Let's try a new deal!" (who knew Remy was a fan of FDR) ,followed by Wolverine's "Cut the deck!" line. The last time I heard lines that terrible, it was from EVOLUTION's Avalanche making one too many "rock and roll" puns.
Hired by "Ms. Zane" to steal the inhibitor collar for a fee, Gambit breaks into the X-Mansion and does exactly that. Despite his explosive power, only Wolverine senses that the Mansion has been breached, despite security measures or Emma Frost being a telepath. He also is the only one who visits the comatose Xavier. The inhibitor collar was invented by Forge, which plays into the comics a bit as he was also the one who invented a gun that stripped Storm's powers away for years in real time ("months" in Marvel time). Of course, the collar would be a gadget du jour for X-Men villains in the 90's series and in a way it always seemed a bit unrealistic for a solve-all collar to strip away mutant powers no matter what type they were (surely a bruiser with dense muscles works biologically different than a psychic), but that is another matter. It's a staple.
Wolverine uses his tracking power to find Gambit, who has already handed the collar to Zane for a large pay-out. He gets into a fight with Wolverine who burns his cash, but offers to pay "double" if Gambit helps retrieve the collar, seeming to know enough about the Guild that Gambit would know who his employer is. I have no idea how the heck Wolverine would know the rules of the guild. But then again, I have no idea why a character with a healing factor and an adamantium skull would bother wearing a motorcycle helmet (besides BS & P, of course).
Gambit and Wolverine track Zane down to her base, where she was hired by Trask to retrieve the collar and hand it to Dr. Bolivar Trask, head of the SENTINEL program (the Dr. Wily of the X-Universe). Gambit and Wolverine of course have a tit-for-tat partnership for the mission, with Gambit eager to show off and loyal only to himself. They get into a large right with Zane, Trask's gadgets and more of his Spider-Slayer-esque robots. Gambit appears to abandon Wolverine with the collar, but the ol' Canucklehead pulls a double-fake on Gambit that literally every single person in the viewing audience would see coming immediately (so long as they are over 6 years old). Wolverine manages to save the day and Gambit escapes to find another mission, still a ne'er do well. Considering his thief nature and that her origin was shown last week, including Storm in the episode probably would have made a lot of sense. But then again, this is Wolverine's show foremost, and this episode makes it abundantly clear.
The action is alright; fine for a network cartoon, but nothing like some of the brawls in SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN, JLU, or TEEN TITANS (but superior to FANTASTIC FOUR: WGH). The animation is alright, with some typical TV animation glitches like some off-model shots or stilted movements, but I'm used to that for most TV cartoons, so knocking W&TXM for it when virtually every network TV cartoon has some of those hiccups would be unfair. It's still better than some animated fare from the 90's or even a few years ago.
Some would call this the worst episode so far, but I don't know. I'm not a fan of Gambit, but I wasn't a fan of Storm & Shadow King last week, either. I am a fan of Emma Frost in a nightgown, though. Yum. Overall, I'd say it was about as good as last week's episode. While that episode had more characters and felt like more of a team show, this was another type of episode. It was meant to introduce Gambit as a neutral, professional mutant and to play him off the idealized Wolverine. The scene where Logan "asks" Charles for help was pretty good. A bit OOC that Scott isn't bothering, but at this point, not surprising. Scott's a background detail so far, on the roster because most people associate him with the X-Men, but has provided nothing of interest thus far beyond an occasional red blast. Gambit in one episode did more than Scott has in four.