Tag Archives: immoral x-men

X-Men Krakoa Era Reading Guide Part 3

Welcome to part 3 of Graphic Policy‘s (mostly) comprehensive reading guide for the X-Men’s Krakoan Era, if you missed part 1 here’s the link and here’s the link to part 2. Last time we covered Reign of X, The Hellfire Gala, The Trial Of Magneto, and Inferno. This time we’re covering X Lives/X Deaths Of Wolverine, Destiny Of X, A.X.E.: Judgment Day, Dark Web and finally Sins Of Sinister.

Now I’m going to repeat myself a bit (again) and talk again about the Marvel Unlimited App. Marvel Unlimited is a subscription service that gives you access to virtually the entire back catalog of Marvel Comics with new comics added around three months after publication. like I said last time, Marvel Unlimited was an invaluable resource for me while reading through the Krakoan Era of X-Men and I can’t recommend it enough.

Without further ado let’s read some comics!

X LIVES/X DEATHS OF WOLVERINE

X LIVES/X DEATHS OF WOLVERINE

“Time’s sideways and time’s forwards. Time’s backwards and upside down.”

X Lives Of Wolverine is a time hopping odyssey through the messy and often contradictory history of Wolverine. Meanwhile X Deaths Of Wolverine follows the recently depowered Moira MacTaggert as she goes on the run from Krakoa and a mysterious techno-organic Wolverine!

Reading order:

  • X Lives of Wolverine #1
  • X Deaths of Wolverine #1
  • X Lives of Wolverine #2
  • X Deaths of Wolverine #2
  • X Lives of Wolverine #3
  • X Deaths of Wolverine #3
  • X Lives of Wolverine #4
  • X Deaths of Wolverine #4
  • X Lives of Wolverine #5
  • X Deaths of Wolverine #5

DESTINY OF X

DESTINY OF X

“I think we need to be on the same side”

Coming off the heels of X Lives/X Deaths the line relaunches with several new titles such as the political thriller Immortal X-Men by Kieron Gillen, X-Men Red a exploration of Arrako by Al Ewing, the sequel to Way Of X, Legion Of X, the surprising critique of carceral system Sabertooth by Victor LaValle, The new iteration of Marauders by Steve Orlando, and the penultimate installment in Tini Howard’s Betsy Braddock saga Knights Of X. All of these stand alongside the continuing titles X-Force and Wolverine by Benjamin Percy, and the flagship of the line Gerry Duggan’s X-Men.

Reading order:

  • Sabertooth #1-5
  • X-Force Annual #1
  • X-Force #27-29
  • Wolverine #20–23
  • X-Men #10
  • Immortal X-Men #1–3
  • X-Men: Red #1
  • Giant-Size X-Men: Thunderbird #1
  • X-Men: Red #2–3
  • Legion of X #1–5
  • Marvel’s Voices Infinity Comic #1-4*
  • Knights of X #1–5
  • X-Men #11–12
  • Marauders Annual #1
  • Marauders #1–5
  • X-Men: Red #4
  • X-Men: Hellfire Gala 2022 #1
  • Immortal X-Men #4

*Marvel’s Voices Infinity Comic is our first Infinity Comic, a type of scrolling comic hosted on marvel unlimited (see told you it was important). It’s not mandatory and pretty skippable but it’s good and sets up a romantic love interest for Iceman that you’ll see in the future. Another Infinity comic is X-Men Unlimited which largely offers slice of life stories on Krakoa, it only really becomes plot relevant during the Fall Of X.

A.X.E.: JUDGEMENT DAY

A.X.E.: JUDGEMENT DAY

“You have 24 hours to justify yourselves”

Two tribes go to war! It’s X-Men vs Eternals with the Avengers caught in-between. The threads from Gillen’s Eternals run and Immortal X-Men collide in this giant-sized event! A.X.E: Judgment Day is perhaps the largest event in this series of reading guides. We’re keeping our reading guide for this event to the main stuff which luckily is mostly X-Men.

Reading order:

  • Eternals #1-6*
  • Eternals: Thanos Rises #1*
  • Eternals: Celestia #1*
  • Eternals #7-9*
  • Eternals: The Heretic #1*
  • Eternals 10-12*
  • Free Comic Book Day 2022: Avengers/X-Men #1
  • A.X.E.: Eve of Judgment #1
  • A.X.E.: Judgment Day #1
  • Immortal X-Men #5
  • X-Men: Red #5
  • A.X.E.: Judgment Day #2
  • A.X.E.: Death to the Mutants #1
  • X-Men #13
  • A.X.E.: Judgment Day #3
  • X-Men #14
  • Marauders #6
  • Wolverine 24-25
  • X-Force #30-33
  • A.X.E.: Death to the Mutants #2
  • Immortal X-Men #6
  • X-Men Red #6
  • A.X.E.: Judgment Day #4
  • Legion of X #6
  • A.X.E.: Judgment Day #5
  • A.X.E.: Avengers #1
  • A.X.E.: X-Men #1
  • A.X.E.: Eternals #1
  • X-Men Red #7
  • A.X.E.: Death to the Mutants #3
  • A.X.E.: Starfox #1
  • Immortal X-Men #7
  • A.X.E.: Judgment Day #6
  • A.X.E.: Judgment Day Omega #1

*While not a part of A.X.E.: Judgment Day proper these issues comprise Kieron Gillen’s run on Eternals. It’s essential to understanding Judgment Day which is in all honesty the second part of the Gillen Eternals’s run.

DESTINY OF X PART 2

DESTINY OF X PART 2

“Governments ask you to build terrible things. It’s up to the scientists to weigh what’s worse… having that new toy… or not having it”

After the massive event that was A.X.E: Judgment Day we return to our regularly scheduled programming. Here both Steve Orlando’s Marauders and Vita Ayala’s New Mutants. On the flip side we get the Gleefully Transgressive mini-series X-Terminators by Leah Williams, a Firestar centric story in X-Men Annual by Steve Orlando, and what’s in my opinion the best arc of Gerry Duggan’s X-Men.

Reading order:

  • Marauders #7-12
  • New Mutants #25-30
  • X-Terminators #1-5
  • X-Men Annual (2022) #1
  • X-Men #15-18

DARK WEB

DARK WEB

“A nothing person! In a nowhere place!”

Another event! Dark Web is primarily a crossover between Zeb Well’s Amazing Spider-Man and X-Men. There are a few other titles involved in the event but were keeping it strictly need to know and X-centric. Spider-Man’s clone Ben Reilly has turned evil and has teamed up with the X-Men’s resident evil clone Madelyne Pryor! Together they conspire to takeover New York and take back what was stolen from them!

Reading order:

  • The Amazing Spider-Man #14
  • Dark Web #1
  • Dark Web: X-Men #1
  • Venom #14
  • Dark Web X-Men #2-3
  • Dark Web Final #1

DESTINY OF X PART 3

DESTINY OF X PART 3

“Survival of the fittest.”

This one is a real grab bag of stuff. In X-Men the titular team is off fighting the brood, Deadpool by Alyssia Wong is a not so subtle love story, Victor LaValle explores the history of medical malpractice of minorities in Sabertooth and the Exiles of all places, Charlie Jane Anders introduces a new young mutant Escapade, Tini Howard wraps up her Betsy Braddock saga in Betsy Braddock: Captain Britan, and finally something sinister is brewing.

Reading order:

  • X-Men #19-21
  • Deadpool #1-10
  • Sabretooth and the Exiles #1-5
  • Marvel’s Voices: Pride 2022 #1*
  • New Mutants #31-33
  • New Mutants: Lethal Legion #1-5
  • Betsy Braddock: Captain Britain #1-5
  • Immortal X-Men #8
  • X-Men Red #8-10
  • Legion of X #7-10

*Like the year before it, Marvel’s Voices: Pride 2022 #1 introduces a brand new character who will be relevant for a at the time upcoming book, in this case the only story you need to worry about is “Permanent Sleepover”.

SINS OF SINISTER

SINS OF SINISTER

“To me, my me’s”

Mr. Sinister wins! Split between three time periods, year 10, year 100, and year 1,000 (à la HOXPOX), this alternate future event (à la Age Of Apocalypse) welcomes us to a entire universe cursed by the Sins Of Sinister! Immoral X-Men, Storm & the Brotherhood of Mutants, and Nightcrawlers each are essentially continuations of Immortal X-Men, X-Men Red, and Legion of X respectively. Sins of Sinister is a interesting event that puts a spin on a X-Men classic, the dark future!

Reading order:

  • Immortal X-Men #9-10
  • Sins of Sinister #1
  • Storm & the Brotherhood of Mutants #1
  • Nightcrawlers #1
  • Immoral X-Men #1
  • Nightcrawlers #2
  • Immoral X-Men #2
  • Storm & the Brotherhood of Mutants #2
  • Immoral X-Men #3
  • Storm & the Brotherhood of Mutants #3
  • Nightcrawlers #3
  • Sins of Sinister: Dominion #1

And so we come to a close on the third part of our (mostly) comprehensive Krakoa Era reading guide. Before I said to come back and join us next time for the next installment but at the time of writing the next chapter in the Krakoan era, Fall Of X is still coming out. However once it’s all said and done we’ll come back to finish this series of reading guides off.

Around the Tubes

The weekend is almost here! What geeky things are you all doing? Sound off in the comments! While you wait for the weekday to end and the weekend to begin, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web.

DCist – Federal Board Says Georgetown Transformers Sculptures Must Be Removed – Well, that’s bullshit.

Reviews

CBR – Disney Villains: Scar #1
CBR – Immoral X-Men #3
The Beat – Kitaro, Japan’s Classic Manga
CBR – Star Wars #33

Star Wars #33

Immoral X-Men #3 teases great concepts

Immoral X-Men #3

It’s been 1,000 years since Sinister’s experiment began. 1,000 years that have led to destruction, death, war, a plan completely spiraled out of control. Sinister is now attempting to right his wrong, searching for the one weapon that can correct everything. Immoral X-Men #3 adds another glimpse the the mad world Sinister has wrought and adds more wrinkles to the end game for this event.

Kieron Gillen continues the interesting thread of Sinister’s journey as he and Rasputin IV travel through space in hopes of finding clues to take them to the weapon to correct the madness. It’s an interesting journey that feels much more like a travelogue than anything else. There’s some action and very interesting moments but much like the event as a whole, it’s a sliver of a narrative.

That “sliver” is partially what has made Sins of Sinister so interesting and so frustrating at the same time. Each issue takes place at a different point in this event. The first issues are 10 years, second 100, and third are 1,000. And thus, they’re just a moment of time. Each issue hints and teases the story at this point forcing readers to piece together what has happened. It also leaves a lot wanted. Everything presented could be a story unto themselves with a full miniseries dedicated to what’s shown. But, we’re given just a glimpse of where things are at, pieces of a puzzle where we can infer the picture but never get to see all of it. That’s both original and frustrating because what’s presented is so interesting. I want to know how we got to each of these points.

The art by Alessandro Vitti is interesting and feels like it’s both grounded in a way and also a world gone mad. With color by Rain Beredo, lettering by Clayton Cowles, and design by Jay Bowen, the art adds so much to the story. We need to infer and figuring out where things stand from the visuals as much as by what’s said. The two need to work hand in hand to really deliver all the information we need. Here, we get a lot of that with teases and hints as to where the mutant legion have taken the world. The visuals drive home the corruption, like rot that has spiraled out of control.

Immoral X-Men #3 is good. It also leaves me wanting a lot more. How the three issues remaining for the event will be able to tie things up and get things somewhat back to the way they were should be impressive. Hopefully, it’s a bit more of a straight narrative than the event so far. Overall, it’s something original, but it’s originality that leaves things in a frustrating place as well.

Story: Kieron Gillen Art: Alessandro Vitti
Color: Rain Beredo Letterer: Clayton Cowles Design: Jay Bowen
Story: 8.0 Art: 8.0 Overall: 8.0 Recommendation: Buy

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: TFAWZeus ComicscomiXology/Kindle

Exclusive Preview: Immoral X-Men #3 (of 3)

Immoral X-Men #3 (of 3)

(W) Kieron Gillen (A) Alessandro Vitti
(CA) Leinil Yu (VCA) Salvador Larroca
Rated T+
In Shops: Apr 05, 2023
SRP: $4.99

THE EXPERIMENT ENDS? Year 1 was the start of the experiment. By Year 10, it was filling a petri dish. By Year 100, it had cracked the glass and spread across the desk. Now it’s been 1000 years, and the lab is filled by the writhing, pulsing sins of sinister and all the lab staff have been devoured. Everyone is in hell. The upside: this includes Sinister.

Immoral X-Men #3 (of 3)

Immoral X-Men #2 delivers the hero in Sinister we deserve

Immoral X-Men #2

Hail the Pax Krakoa! Or perish! But to this hell age is born a hero. Say hello (again) to Rasputin IV…but what can one good chimera do in a universe of sin? The first century of Sinister’s plan has come to an end…and whether it’s better or worse may depend on the symbol on your forehead. Immoral X-Men #2 delivers a wild ride of an issue full of betrayal and (H)hope.

Told mainly from the perspective of Hope, Immoral X-Men #2 takes place 100 years after “Sins of Sinister” launched. The X-Men are waging war on a galactic scale crushing enemies with chimera bombs, wiping out all dissent. It’s the type of horrors that they experienced themselves on a grand scale. “Sins of Sinister” is a story about plans out of control and this is the perfect example of exactly that.

Writer Kieron Gillen delivers an intriguing issue that might be one of the best of the bunch. It stays focused on the issues that have spawned out of Sinister’s plans, and lays out the regret Sinister has for it all. And, it delivers a little hope that we might have a hero(es) who will correct the past, literally.

And that’s adds a little more depth to this event which spins the fractured, broken, twisted, apocalyptic future. Usually the individual who has caused the splinter in time is resolute and sure in their rule. Here, we have a villain that sees their mistake and flaw. And, they might want to correct it. Something we desperately need in the real world.

But the issue gets more intriguing as the cracks are shown within the out of control Quiet Council leadership, hinting at the ever growing chaos to come regarding their vision and direction for their people and world.

The art by Andrea Di Vito is solid giving us a sci-fi world that’s dark but light at the same time. There’s a cloud that hangs over everything but avoids the gloom of so many broken future storylines. With color by Jim Charalampidis and lettering by Clayton Cowles, the comic delivers a world that is slightly twisted and horrifying in many ways. There’s also the cool flash and concepts as we get to see Sinister’s work of the twisted mutants of the future he’s molded and grown.

Immoral X-Men #2 is an interesting issue. It doesn’t feel so much like a sliver of a greater story but a story itself. It shows off the potential of this event which started strong but turned bumpy in its structuring. Unfortunately, the next issue jumps ahead in time leaving us to put pieces together as to what happened between issues. And that’s the thing about “Sins of Sinister” and this particular issue. Unlike others, where we have to spend so much time guessing what has happened, this focuses on what is happening and where things go next. Like the story overall, it shows not what was, but what can be.

Story: Kieron Gillen Art: Andrea Di Vito
Color: Jim Charalampidis Letterer: Clayton Cowles Design: Jay Bowen
Story: 8.3 Art: 8.2 Overall: 8.25 Recommendation: Buy

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicscomiXology/Kindle

Exclusive Preview: Immoral X-Men #2 (of 3)

Immoral X-Men #2 (of 3)

(W) Kieron Gillen (A) Andrea Di Vito
(CA) Leinil Yu (VCA) Mahmud Asrar, Todd Nauck
Rated T+
In Shops: Mar 15, 2023
SRP: $4.99

PUTTING THE “DIE” IN DIAMOND AGE! Hail the Pax Krakoa! Or perish! But to this hell age is born a hero. Say hello (again) to Rasputin IV…but what can one good chimera do in a universe of sin? The first century of Sinister’s plan has come to an end and whether it’s better or worse may depend on the symbol on your forehead.

Immoral X-Men #2 (of 3)

Around the Tubes

Blue Book #1

It was new comic book day yesterday! What’d you all get? What’d you like? Dislike? Sound off in the comments below. While you think about that, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web.

CNET – AI-Generated Comic Book Reportedly Loses Copyright Protections – Good.

Book Riot – 11 of the Best Shōnen Manga to Read in 2023 – What would you include?

Reviews

CBR – The Amazing Spider-Man #20
Comicbook – Blue Book #1
CBR – Blue Book #1
Collected Editions – The Flash Vol. 17 Eclipsed
CBR – Gargoyles #3
Comicbook – Immoral X-Men #1
CBR – Immoral X-Men #1

Immoral X-Men #1 emphasizes that even the best plans can get out of hand

Immoral X-Men #1

Sins of Sinister” continues in Immoral X-Men #1 one of a small number of comics that make up the event. Mr. Sinister has used Moira McTaggert’s time reset powers to slowly infect Krakoa and the X-Men, infusing them with a dash of Sinister. The Earth has been taken over, with mutants reigning and controlling. But, threats still exist in a galaxy that won’t stand to the side and let them do the the same in the stars. There’s also the missing Sinister lab with his ability to reset time.

Written by Kireon Gillen, Immoral X-Men #1 picks up on the story’s emphasis that things have gotten out of hand for Mr. Sinister. His plan has worked a bit too well and while mutants have a bit of Sinister in them, he doesn’t control them. Yes, there’s some failsafe aspects he mentions but overall, things have gotten out of hand. Sinister should be happy, he’s won… but he also hasn’t.

And, if the comic focused just on that, it’d be a solid dive into a new idea for an alternate timeline story. Instead, it splits it time as the Quiet Council goes on a hunt for Sinister who they have figured out isn’t quite on board. So, the comic splits between Sinister’s woe is me and a race/hunt. Focusing on either aspect is worth an entire comic, an entire miniseries, but the split doesn’t quite do justice for either. At times Sinister’s lamenting feels like a recap of the story and the X-Men never quite make the case as to why they should rule, their plan, and they come off as a bit unorganized.

The art by Paco Medina is pretty solid and the comic has a sinister feel about it while also a slight comedic aspect as well. Joined on ink by Walden Wong and Victor Olazaba and color by Jay David Ramos and Chris Sotomayor, the visuals are fun and interesting and keep the comic flowing and entertaining. Clayotn Cowle‘s lettering impressively keeps Sinister’s long rants readable and never clutters the visuals. Overall, the comic does an excellent job of delivering a world that has a dark cloud hanging over it but never feeling gloomy. It keeps the “fun” of Sinister as part of its DNA to deliver a slightly different feel for this type of storyline.

While I generally enjoyed Immoral X-Men #1, there’s a choppiness to the narrative that took me out of it. There was almost too much jumping around between Sinister and the Quiet Council and a focus on one or the other would have been stronger. Still, it highlights that this is an alternate timeline tale that’s a bit different than what has come before.

Story: Kieron Gillen Art: Paco Medina
Ink: Walden Wong, Victor Olazaba Color: Jay David Ramos, Chris Sotomayor
Letterer: Clayton Cowles Design: Jay Bowen
Story: 7.95 Art: 7.95 Overall: 7.95 Recommendation: Read

Marvel provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicscomiXology/Kindle

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

Superman #1 cover

Wednesdays (and Tuesdays) are new comic book day! Each week hundreds of comics are released, and that can be pretty daunting to go over and choose what to buy. That’s where we come in

Each week our contributors choose what they can’t wait to read this week or just sounds interesting. In other words, this is what we’re looking forward to and think you should be taking a look at!

Find out what folks think below, and what comics you should be looking out for this week.

Banshees #1 (Scout Comics) – A college student discovers the truth about a serial killer that stalked her college campus for a decade.

Barbaric: Hell to Pay #2 (Vault Comics) – It’s a new group of screw up adventurers who are tring to break Owen out of hell. Off the rails fantasy adventuring!

Batman: One Bad Day – Clayface #1 (DC Comics) – Collin Kelly and Jackson Lanzing telling a Clayface story? Yes please!

Betsy Braddock: Captain Britain #1 (Marvel)We’ve already reviewed it and have high praise!

Blue Book #1 (Dark Horse Comics) – A nonfiction comic book experience depicting true stories of UFO abductions with an eye to capturing the strange essence of those encounters.

Bulls of Beacon Hill #2 (AfterShock) – Boston Surgeon Christopher Boldt is getting more famous by the day – but that’s the problem. Chris’ secret doesn’t just threaten himself, it threatens the person he’s ashamed to say he’s related to: his mobster father. Great first issue which mixed politics, family drama, and a good ole mobster story.

Darkwing Duck #2 (Dynamite Entertainment) – The first issue was fantastic and a return to the animated series we love. Beyond excited for more Darkwing Duck!

First Time for Everything (First Second) – A First Time for Everything is a feel-good coming-of-age memoir based on New York Times-bestselling author and Caldecott Medal winner Dan Santat’s awkward middle school years.

Gargoyles #3 (Dynamite Entertainment) – The second issue was a bit of a mess but we’re hoping the third issue is more like the first which was beyond fantastic.

GCPD: The Blue Wall #5 (DC Comics) – The last issue was a shocker and the series has taken a hell of a turn. We want to see where it goes.

Godfell #1 (Vault Comics) – One sunny day in the land of Kerethim, God falls dead from the sky. The impact sends out shockwaves that draw in royal families at war, shadowy creatures of the dark, and armies of the dispossessed, all coming to lay claim to parts of God’s body. That just sounds awesome!

Immoral X-Men #1 (Marvel) – A new “Sins of Sinister” tie-in series.

Irmina (SelfMadeHero) – Based on a true story, in the mid-1930s, Irmina, an ambitious young German, moves to London. At a cocktail party, she meets Howard Green, one of the first black students at Oxford, who, like Irmina, is working towards an independent existence. However, their relationship comes to an abrupt end when Irmina, constrained by the political situation in Hitler’s Germany, is forced to return home.

Lazarus Planet: Omega #1 (DC Comics) – The finale leads into “Dawn of DC” which has already kicked off so we’re more intrigued to see where this goes and how it wraps up mixed in with what we’ve already seen.

Local Man #1 (Image Comics) – Tim Seeley and Tony Fleecs alone has this sold for us. But the concept of a former superhero forced to return home to their parent’s basement sounds original and interesting.

Plush #4 (Image Comics) – Every issue has been jaw dropping funny and so over the top.

Rooster Fighter Vol. 3 (VIZ Media) – The concept of a wandering Rooster fighting kaiju might sound silly but it really works and is a hell of a lot of fun.

Savage Avengers #10 (Marvel) – The series has been a lot of fun as writer David Pepose shows off his talent for delivering a remix of sorts of what’s come before. Fans of Marvel 2099 will won’t want to miss the latest arc.

Superman #1 (DC Comics) – It’s “Dawn of DC” and Joshua Williamson writing and Jamal Campbell’s art has us wanting to check out this new Superman series.

Tower #1 (A Wave Blue World) – Real-life contestants battle it out in a video game-style competition to reach the top of the Tower! It’s a familiar plot but we want to see where this one might differ.

Preview: Immoral X-Men #1 (of 3)

Immoral X-Men #1 (of 3)

(W) Kieron Gillen (A) Paco Medina (CA) Leinil Yu
Rated T+
In Shops: Feb 22, 2023
SRP: $4.99

They said the mutants were humanity’s future. It’s 10 years later and they were proven to be right. The X-Men exist in a world that adores and respects them…so why are they sworn to crush it?! But while they do, Emma can take a few minutes out to crush Mister Sinister.

Immoral X-Men #1 (of 3)
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