The idea I had at the time for how this could have worked was to have had Bobby's homosexuality hidden behind a mental block caused by Xavier that Jean Grey accidentally removes. Not only would this cleanly get around the fact that Bobby has never thought about men on panel, but it would somewhat redeem Jean Grey. Tbh, I cannot stand the character, she's a creator's pet whom the entire X-universe revolves around in some way, but forcibly outing Bobby advanced her to ''reprehensible'' in my eyes.GreyICE wrote: ↑Mon May 11, 2020 8:38 pm Ice Man being gay and deeply in the closet actually works. The way he was written, he had this awkward habit of casually flirting with every woman on the team, while they were in relationships, in the same room, anything. That, combined with how immensely dysfunctional his few relationships actually were, makes sense for him being deep in the closet. It makes double sense when we consider that avoidance is a huge character trait of Bobby Drake - he's an Omega level mutant who runs from his powers and has many times commented that he almost never uses his full power, because he doesn't want to be like that, that he doesn't want the responsibility and doesn't think he should have that power. I mean you're talking someone who could go toe-to-toe with Magneto at full power (and smart money would be on Drake), and his usual plan is to throw snowballs and act goofy.
So could a good writer make it work? Hell yeah. It wouldn't even be very difficult. Give it to that writer for a solo run, 12-issue miniseries like The Visions (a FANTASTIC series). Bam, done, easy-peasy. Instead they handled it so bad it fucking hurts. Because OF COURSE they did. Marvel really hasn't evolved since the Rawhide Kid.
As to why Prof. X would forcibly turn Bobby straight, i think the safest answer to go with would be ''because Bobby asked him to''. Why? Who knows. But it sounds like a great potential story hook to me.