How do you expect him to reference present day continuity without spoilering what is happening in others books? Could he say Jean is back before Phoenix Ressurection? This is not an official team of X-men, they are working together in a crazy situation that just escalated beyond expected, with Forouk, than FantomeXavier and now Proteus. How can a book that is being released once a month and which story happens in a few hours is going to recognize things that are happening in a bimonthly book, in which stories are ocurring in a bigger period of time, like Gold or Blue?
This is what Soule planned for the story of the book, a crazy story with a big mistery unfolding in 12 issues. I also think it would be better being released twice a month, but saying Soule doesn't worry about continuity at all is unfair. In this issue alone he mentioned a lot of things of the X-crhonology, including some crazy Proteus story from annuals of decades ago, that a few of us really read/remember.
Criticize responsibly, or else, only writers like Guggenheim will be wanting to write for the X-men, since the good ones will want to be far away from the franchise as they can.
I liked that he referenced that story from an annual (was it x-factor?, I liked it because Jean and marvel boy were using their telekinesis together ), but someone mentioned somewhere (might be the first page or on comicvine, can't remember), that Proteus may be lying or there's some continuity errors by Soule. Moira said Proteus was born 20 years ago when she and her husband separated, she put in the special room/cage 10 years ago when his powers manifested, so he was already in his 20s, not 10.
I could not find the scene where she says he was born 20 years ago (not that I'm doubting anyone), but if that's the case, maybe Kevin is saying he was 10 years old when Colossus killed him, because he defends that the 10 years he was kept locked he couldn't mature, so he was forever 10 years old inside the cell, since he had no experience with the world outside. And I can understand that he saw himself like a 10 years old kid when that happened, since he is "thousands years old" now (because of the time in the astral plane) and can see things differently.
Last edited by Psyknight; 02-22-2018 at 12:58 PM.
I'm not sure if they fully count her as Asian given how often they remind us that she's British in an Asian body and all, and again we've seen previews for future issues and such and she's still Asian, and various artists draw her differently...every character has that...and there's always the idea that maybe it's all a tease to drum up people talking...
Guggenheim has the most selling x-men team book
Soule has team book which is losing readers faster than any other.
Guus is focused mostly on Kitty but developed other characters like Colossus.
Soule is focused mostly on X but didn't develop other characters.
Stakes in gold are also higher than in Astonishing. In Astonishing X-men... X-men can't lose... even death can't stop them
To be fair I actually forgot about Jubilee. Such as one does.
Still I would say that Betsy has a bit of an edge in that she has been consistently in books since 2004, whereas Jubilee was depowered and shuffled to the side for years without anyone having a clear idea what to do with her. Betsy is their most popular Asian character on the comics side, whereas the general populace would probably recognize Jubilee first. Apocalypse did help Betsy a bit though, and she was Asian there as well.
"We come into this world alone and we leave the same way. The time we spent in between - time spent alive, sharing, learning together... is all that makes life worth living." - Jean Grey
Had this book double shipped as I mentioned in the post you quoted, AXM would have been done in time for PR, hence alleviating the main issue I have with this book
Not really. Psylocke's ethnicity was not disclosed in Apocalypse. Olivia Munn may be multiracial but she's ambigious enough that most people cant pick her out unless they know her background
"We come into this world alone and we leave the same way. The time we spent in between - time spent alive, sharing, learning together... is all that makes life worth living." - Jean Grey