Like I said you are wrong. You are telling me that Stan Lee's description and Frank Miller's description of a guy from Marvel's series and that Frank Miller once was apart of are wrong and you are right. Frank Miller has stated he is the "gruff loner". Stan Lee has said "loner" about Wolverine many of times.
They can SAY what they want. They can SHOW what they want in a few stories. That doesn't make him, in the context of his place in the Marvel universe and the X-Men mythology, strictly fit the definition of the concept of a loner. I'll give you that he's gruff, but the best that can be said about his interaction with others is that "sometimes" he's a loner. I mean, how many times has Wolverine "teamed up" with people, gone into battle with the X-Men, etc, etc, etc. Someone who constantly fights with a team of people cannot be a loner. If you want to believe that people who sometimes do things alone are "loners", you go right ahead.
A loner is a person who avoids the company of others. He does.
Really? So Logan has no friends? He never seeks out friendship, or assistance from friends?
Once again you are describing where he is and who he knows and not who he is.
I see...so his status as one of the major members of the X-Men, as a mentor to the younger members... that isn't part who he is?
Look at the character and not the team.
Uh...no. You can't just remove the character from his significance as part of the team.
And don't try to say, "Well I know the actual definition." Well not in the context of the character. A loner can be resentful, tries to fly solo, doesn't go with the flow.
Everyone can do that sometimes. A lot of of the time Wolverine pitches right in, flies with the team, and does go with the flow.
Compared to all the other X-Men he is a text book example of a loner.
Because he's alone every so often? He's not a textbook example of a loner anymore than Batman is.
But Wolverine's actions and persona are obviously a loner. I know a loner who has been in groups.
Really? Show me how his actions and persona fit the definition of the concept of loner.
You know a loner who has been in groups? Ok...are they still in groups? Because if they are, this person you know, I have news for you, if they are in groups more often than they are not...they are NOT an actual loner.
You even say he likes to handle things alone.
Sure. Sometimes, like most of us do. It's called being self-reliant.
He searched his past alone.
As we all do from time to time.
He is always found by himself when people come looking for him.
Except when he's found with Jubilee...or Nightcrawler. Or Jean.
Your term for loner is like a person that people don't even know exist. You are describing Mark David Chapman not Logan.
No, my term for loner comes from the dictionary. My term involves what the term actually means. Not what people who don't know what it means think it means.
In the comic books, Wolverine is not a loner in any real sense of the word. He cannot be, as long as he is a willing participant of Alpha Flight, the X-Men, or any other superteam or group of friends and allies. He may want to be. He may have been at one point, and he may try to be again sometimes because he's socially awkward. But he always comes back to the X-Men, to allies and friends, and he values these things and even seeks them out, and thus he is not, in the general sense of the character, an actual loner.
And you never say when we saw the feral.
When he has a nightmare and can't control his anger and rage, and stabs Rogue in X-MEN. When he goes ape**** in the mansion in X2, and during his fight with Deathstrike at a certain point. When he's in the forest in X3.