Originally Posted by
Omega Alpha
You looking it from your perspective and not Marvel: a will-they/won't they thing might irritate you or some fans that think it would be out of character, but would definitively be something that Marvel would try to for an easy cash grab and to generate hype to the book, even more if they play a triangle with Logan. For the vast majority of fans, it would be the most talked about thing. Plus, would make more sense than to reconnect them off-panel or after one issue in the end of Uncanny/Age of X-man.
You might dislike them apart, but makes zero sense from a writers perspective to just reconnect them off panel or after one or two issues, not only for sales, but the sheer amount of trauma and non-sense that Scott has been through all these years, and all the problems they faced through in general that can be explored and generate stories.
Also, editorials approach to romance and Scott's view may matter to Rosenberg, since he's not famous and popular enough to not have a run with a lot of editorial interference or direction, but Hickman is another matter: Marvel needs him to take over the X-men more than the other way around right now. His view on Scott for example, is a 180º of Marvel's view ever since AvX; this, in fact, it's part of the reason we have Scott right now in Uncanny with a "redemption" arc for bad stuff he supposedly did, but no one says what exactly, because Hickman doesn't give a crap and is very much a "Cyclops was right" kind of guy (also, why Emma isn't with this X-men team is simply because JDW hates her as a X-man)
Likewise, I doubt when Marvel handed him the command of the books and the line, they gave him an order of "Scott must/must not date Jean". He was brought in to overhaul the books entirely and redefine even how we see mutantkind and the history of the X-men because he's the only writer with enough popularity and credibility to do so currently, so I hardly think this will be a defining factor. He'll probably do what he thinks it's best for the story and the characters, and that's probably the best approach.