Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Uncanny X-Men, originally published as The X-Men, is an American comic book series published by Marvel Comics since 1963, and is the longest-running series in the X-Men comics franchise. It features a team of superheroes called the X-Men, a group of mutants with superhuman abilities led and taught by Professor X .

  2. Uncanny X-Men #141 in January 1981 to Uncanny X-Men #198 in October 1985. Era #4: X-Factor. Uncanny X-Men #199 in November 1985 to Uncanny X-Men #243 in April 1989. Era #5: X-Tinction. Uncanny X-Men #244 in May 1989 to Uncanny X-Men #280 in September 1981. Era #6: Fatal Attractions.

  3. People also ask

  4. September 1963 to December 2011. Issue Numbering: X-Men (1st series) #1-141. Uncanny X-Men (1st series) #142-544. Overview: Title was originally just called X-Men until #142, when it changed to Uncanny X-Men. Title was canceled with #66 but continued to be published until #93, reprinting earlier stories.

  5. The flagship X-Men comic for over 40 years, Uncanny X-Men delivers action, suspense, and a hint of science fiction month in and month out. Follow the adventures of Professor Charles Xavier's team of mutants as they attempt to protect a world that hates and fears them.

    • Before The Beginning – November 1999 Through June 2001
    • Where to Begin: New X-Men by Grant Morrison
    • Astonishing X-Men by Joss Whedon & John Cassaday –
    • House of M
    • Decimation
    • Marvel Universe Event: Civil War
    • X-Men: Messiah Complex and The Great Hope Summers
    • Marvel Universe Event: Secret Invasion
    • Marvel Universe Event: Siege
    • X-Men: Schism

    For me, the logical starting point for a modern X-Men reading order is with Grant Morrison’s New X-Men . We’ll get there in a minute, but there are a handful of X-issues that you can read before New X-Men that will help set the stage for references to come. Likewise, if you really want to run the clock back, check out Comic Book Herald’s complete g...

    Necessary Reading From This X-Era:

    New X-Men Omnibus Collects: New X-Men 114-154, Annual 2001 Morrison starts strong introducing a number of ideas all at once, including creating an evil twin sister for Professor Xavier and then having her take control of a bunch of sentinels. This comes along with longer-threads, like having Emma Frost join the team for the first time and introducing the idea of “secondary mutations.” Somehow, this all feels like “classic X-men” while being brand new at the same time. This keeps going the ent...

    Collects: Astonishing X-Men #1-24, And Giant-Size Astonishing X-Men #1. There’s a serious debate within the community whether these 25 issues are the best run of the decade. The character work is great, there are some truly clever ideas, and the pacing makes it all feel effortless. The only way it could possibly place second is if Grant Morrison were to… exist? Astonishing X-Men #1 – #6 Uncanny X-Men #444 – #454 – Beginning with issue #444 Chuck Austen’s lengthy and generally frowned upon run...

    (Alternate Timeline)After Scarlet Witch de-powered all mutants at the end of Avengers Disassembled, a pocket universe was temporarily born titled “House of M.” The universe basically acts like a “monkey’s paw” for certain key heroes. Wolverine gets all of his memories back and they’re terrible. Steve Rogers got to age gracefully and is now an old m...

    (Main Timeline)When House of M ends and reality returns to normal, it must finally contend with Wanda’s curse of “no more mutants.” On “M Day,” thousands of mutants loose their powers instantly, making the whole of mutant kind into an endangered species. The series really gives a sense of scale, and sets the starting tone on an anxious decade for t...

    In Marvel’s big hero vs. hero slugfest, the mutants play an important role. And that role is to act as even more of an allegory for racism than usual! (Fear not: there is some fun, like when Wolverine survives being hit by a nuke.)

    Necessary Reading From This X-Era:

    Messiah Complex Check out the below Messiah Complex guide for the order of issues in this crossover event. 1. X-Men: Messiah Complex (one-shot) 2. Uncanny X-Men #492 3. X-Factor #25 4. New X-Men #44 5. X-Men #205 6. Uncanny X-Men #493 7. X-Factor #26 8. New X-Men #45 9. X-Men #206 10. Uncanny #494 11. X-Factor #27 12. New X-men #46 13. X-Men #207 X-Factor #28 – #32 X-Force #1 – #13 After the horrible war of attrition to recover the baby called hope, Cyclops tasks Wolverine to form an off-the-...

    A fun little event where we discover that shape shifting aliens named the Skrulls have secretly replaced a non-trivial number of super heroes, leading to an eventual invasion.

    Norman Osborn pushes the Sentry until he loses what’s left of his mind. Sentry goes and attacks Asgard, which retaliates by declaring all-out war on Earth.

    A mutant attack on the UN leads nations around the globe to mobilize their Sentinel armies. This leads to a tense stand-off as Cyclops wants to put all available mutants into battle… while Wolverine wants the children to be spared. X-Men: Prelude to Schism #1 – #4

  6. Nov 15, 2018 · On Wednesday, November 14, Marvel launched a brand new incarnation of UNCANNY X-MEN, the flagship series of the franchise that dates back to 1963. Needless to say, this is a special occasion.

  7. September 01, 1963. Writer. Stan Lee. Penciller. Jack Kirby. This is where it all began. It's the X-Men vs. the Master of Magnetism! The legendary art of Jack Kirby's cover harks back to a more simple time for the masked mutants and belies the difficult and complicated future that is to come.

  1. People also search for