One thing is that even during the Utopia era, before Wolverine took half the island with him, you still had books that were alternatives to Cyclops’ West coast plan. Like X-Factor.
Right now, every book is on the Krakoa side. With no alternatives.
You’d think at least one book would be more superheroics, or something to contrast the Krakoa regime.
Last edited by Will Evans; 05-29-2020 at 08:38 PM.
yall let fallen angels flop
but jokes aside i think having all the books support krakoan ideology is more of a branding decision, bringing focus/cohesion to the franchise and all that. a lot of krakoa-questioning actually goes on through the line nevertheless tbh
Last edited by houndsofluv; 05-29-2020 at 08:13 PM.
I hate how often the X-men have fallen into the "every mutant in the world does this or lives here" or "these are the two sides, every mutant in the world is on one of these two."Honestly, yeah, I kind of want one book out of the almost 10 book line to be closer to straight superheroics. The problem I have is that they all feel really similar with each other. And when everything they're doing is kinda-shady morally dubious 'national security' junk, it gets old. Plus it makes it harder to root for them, or at least see them as the good guys. Assholes vs. assholes is tough to make interesting for an extended time.
While I have no problems with the idea of a mutant country, I think moving every mutant you can think into to it is a horrible idea from a story telling point of view.
To that point, a problem with the X line for a long time has been that its been in its own little corner of Marvel, and mutants basically didn't exist in other books. There were some exceptions, like Jubilee having an excellent part as a side character in Patsy Walker AKA Hellcat!. I feel that this has inadvertently doubled down on that, because now mutants who weren't even really associated with the X men much are all separated from their contacts and are on Krakoa. I was kind of hoping New Warriors would change that, but its kind of up in the air.
I'm kinda hoping for New Mutants to be the book that gets away from Krakoa, a bit, since Cannonball and not Sunspot are off in Shiar space, about as far from all things Krakoa as one can get... (And it seems like Broo is going to get all cosmic, as well.)
We've already had Cyclops, Polaris, Wolverine, all the Fallen Angels, Gambit, the Morlocks and Nightcrawler question aspects of Krakoa. If there is no Civil War or Schism it seems that for you that is being passive.
My weird fanon of the moment;
The reason there is an open doorway between Logan, Jean and Scott's room on the moon has nothing to do with a poly relationship. (Scott, in particular, is too whitebread to even know what that means...)
It's 'cause Logan has terrible nightmares, and those two are the only two people (other than Kurt) who can snuggle with him and put a stop to them. (without getting stabinated, as Rogue did in the first X-Men movie)
Red Queen Kate is the best take on Kitty ever. Better than Claremont.
Although Bendis Uncanny X-Men had bad things, the tone of what "X-Men should do in the 21st century" and fighting the establishment is one of the best takes on the mutant metaphor.
Things like the ones America is experiencing right now are proof of how actual it feels.
Last edited by Glio; 05-30-2020 at 12:33 PM.