Uncanny X-Men
Uncanny X-Men | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre | Superhero |
Publication date | 1963 – present List
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No. of issues | List
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Creative team | |
Created by | Stan Lee Jack Kirby |
Written by | List
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Penciller(s) | List
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Inker(s) | List
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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.
The title was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, met with a lukewarm reception, and eventually became a reprints-only book in 1970. Interest was rekindled with 1975's Giant-Size X-Men #1 and the debut of a new, international team. Initially under the guidance of artist David Cockrum, writer Len Wein, and especially writer Chris Claremont whose 16-year stint began with August 1975's Uncanny X-Men #94, the series grew in popularity worldwide, eventually spawning a franchise with numerous spin-off "X-books" including New Mutants, X-Factor, Excalibur, X-Force, Generation X, and other flagship titles like the simply titled X-Men (later New X-Men and X-Men Legacy), Astonishing X-Men, All-New X-Men, Amazing X-Men, Extraordinary X-Men and X-Men Gold.
Publication history
[edit]1963–1970: Original run
[edit]Created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby, the series launched in September 1963,[1][2] introducing in its first issue the original five X-Men (Warren Worthington III/Angel, Hank McCoy/Beast, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Robert "Bobby" Drake/Iceman, and Jean Grey/Marvel Girl) and their teacher, Charles Xavier/Professor X as well as their nemesis, the supervillain Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto.[3] Although Lee would deny it, it was noticed by contemporary writer Arnold Drake, that the concept of the series emulated his own earlier series for National Periodical Publications's (now DC Comics) The Doom Patrol, in many respects. However, National's editorial staff did not support Drake's concerns.[4]
Initially published bimonthly, it became a monthly with issue #14 (November 1965). Lee's run lasted 19 issues, and featured the X-Men battling villains such as Magneto's Brotherhood of Mutants (which included the siblings Wanda Maximoff/the Scarlet Witch and Pietro Maximoff/Quicksilver);[5] the Sentinels, giant robots programmed to destroy all mutants, and their creator Bolivar Trask; and Cain Marko/the Juggernaut, Xavier's stepbrother transformed by a mystical gem and seeking revenge on Xavier.
The series was placed firmly in the Marvel Universe, with guest appearances by Namor MacKenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner in #6 and the Avengers in #9. The jungle adventure hero Kevin Plunder/Ka-Zar and the Savage Land were introduced in issue #10.[6] Roy Thomas wrote the series from #20–43 (May 1966 – April 1968). Thomas and artist Werner Roth created Sean Cassidy/the Banshee in #28 (Jan. 1967).[7][8] The X-Men #45 (June 1968) featured a crossover with The Avengers #53 (June 1968).[9][10] After brief runs by Gary Friedrich and Arnold Drake – the latter of whom introduced the new X-Men Lorna Dane/Polaris[11] and Alex Summers/Havok,[12] and during which the series adopted a new logo designed by Jim Steranko – Thomas returned to the series with issue #55 and was joined by artist Neal Adams the following issue for an acclaimed run of stories.[13][14] After a battle with the Hulk in issue #66 (March 1970),[15] the title ceased publishing original material and featured reprints in issues #67–93 (December 1970 – April 1975).
1970–1975: Other appearances
[edit]Despite the title going into reprints for the next five years between #67–93, the X-Men continued to appear in other Marvel titles throughout this period in a guest-starring capacity or cameo appearance, either as a team or in solo adventures.[16]
The Angel appeared without the X-Men in a three-part story involving the murder of his father at the hands of his uncle, Burt Worthington, a.k.a. the Dazzler, in Ka-Zar #2 (Dec. 1970) and #3 (March 1971), and Marvel Tales #30 (April 1971).[17]
Iceman made a guest appearance in Amazing Spider-Man #92 (Jan. 1971), where he battles Spider-Man after mistakenly assuming he abducted Gwen Stacy. Later, after realizing his error, they team up against corrupt politician, Sam Bullitt.[18] Iceman appears alone once again in Marvel Team-Up #23 (July 1974), where he teams up with the Human Torch to battle the Equinox. Cyclops, Marvel Girl, and Angel also make a brief appearance.[19]
The Beast starred in his own series in Amazing Adventures #11–17 (March 1972 – March 1973) after accepting a position with the Brand Corporation, and decides to leave the X-Men for good. The original team appeared briefly in a flashback in #11 (March 1972) and in a present-day cameo appearance in #15 (November 1972). Professor Xavier and Marvel Girl briefly appeared in Amazing Adventures #12 (May 1972), and the Angel helped the Beast defeat the Griffin in Amazing Adventures #15.[20] After his run on that series ended, the Beast battled against the Hulk alone in Incredible Hulk #161 (March 1973), concluding a storyline which began in Amazing Adventures.[21]
Havok and Polaris, as recounted in a flashback in Incredible Hulk #150 (April 1972), leave the X-Men after a bitter quarrel with Iceman and move to New Mexico. In a present-day appearance in the same issue, they encounter and battle the Hulk, who mistakes Polaris for his former lover Jarella, and a biker gang.[22]
As a team, the X-Men assisted Spider-Man in capturing Michael Morbius in Marvel Team-Up #4 (Sept. 1972), written by Gerry Conway, after one of Xavier's colleagues is abducted by the vampire.[23] In Adventure into Fear #20 (Feb. 1974), it is recounted in a flashback how Morbius escaped from the X-Men's mansion. Professor Xavier and Cyclops appeared in a brief cameo.[24]
They appeared in The Avengers #110–111 (April–May 1973), written by Steve Englehart, where Professor Xavier and the X-Men are abducted by Magneto after an ambush at Xavier's mansion, and later rescued by the Avengers, Daredevil, and the Black Widow.[25] Soon after, members of the X-Men, including Iceman, Angel, Beast, Havok and Polaris, and members of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants are secretly being abducted by a group of hooded figures known as the Secret Empire. At this point, only Professor Xavier, Cyclops and Marvel Girl remain active, and, after a brief cameo at the end of Incredible Hulk #172 (Feb. 1974), where they discover an unconscious Juggernaut after a battle with the Hulk,[26] seek out the help of Captain America and the Falcon. This led to the first "Secret Empire" storyline, which ran in Captain America #172–175 (April–July 1974), also written by Steve Englehart.[27]
Professor Xavier made a few brief appearances of his own without the X-Men during this time. In The Avengers #88 (May 1971), written by Roy Thomas and Harlan Ellison, he made a cameo appearance assisting Reed Richards and General Thunderbolt Ross in containing the Hulk,[28] and later appeared briefly onscreen in Shanna the She-Devil #5 (Aug. 1973) to warn Shanna of an unknown mutant threat, Nekra.[29] In The Defenders #15–16 (Sept–Oct. 1974), written by Len Wein, Xavier teamed up with the Defenders to battle against Magneto and his reformed Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. It was in this battle that Magneto and the Brotherhood were reduced to infancy by Alpha, the Ultimate Mutant.[30] Xavier made one final solo appearance during this period in Giant-Size Fantastic Four #4 (Feb. 1975), where he assisted the Fantastic Four in subduing Jamie Madrox, the Multiple Man.[31]
1975–1991: Chris Claremont era
[edit]X-Men was relaunched in May 1975 with Giant-Size X-Men #1, by Len Wein and Dave Cockrum.[32] The title featured a new, international team consisting of Scott Summers (Cyclops) of the United States, Ireland's Sean Cassidy (Banshee), the Japanese mutant Shiro Yoshida (Sunfire), and James "Logan" Howlett (Wolverine) from Canada, along with new characters Ororo Munroe (Storm) out of Kenya, the German Kurt Wagner (Nightcrawler), Piotr "Peter" Rasputin (Colossus) from Russia in The Soviet Union, and John Proudstar (Thunderbird), a Native American. The original plan was to continue Giant-Size X-Men as a quarterly, but instead original stories were printed in the book, again initially bimonthly.[8] Chris Claremont's first issue as writer, #94, featured all the original X-Men leaving the team with the exception of Cyclops. Sunfire also left, having agreed to assist the X-Men on one successful mission only. Thunderbird was killed in #95.[33] Moira MacTaggert, a human ally of the X-Men, and later to be established as a former fiancé of Xavier, debuted in #96.[33] Marvel Girl became Phoenix in issue #101.[34] This was followed by the first Shi'ar space opera story. Cockrum was replaced as penciller by John Byrne as of #108.[35] Byrne became co-plotter, and during his run the series became a monthly title again.[8]
The series title was changed to The Uncanny X-Men with issue #114 (October 1978).
For the remainder of the decade, the X-Men fought enemies such as Stephen Lang and his Sentinels, Magneto, Banshee's cousin Black Tom Cassidy and Cain Marko/the Juggernaut, the Shi'ar Erik the Red and the Imperial Guard, Arcade, Wolverine's former colleagues, the Canadian superhero team Alpha Flight,[36] and MacTaggert's son Proteus.[37] In 2010, Comics Bulletin ranked Claremont and Byrne's run on The X-Men second on its list of the "Top 10 1970s Marvels".[38]
The "Dark Phoenix Saga" in 1980 led to a change in the line-up of the team, with the death of Phoenix (Jean Grey),[39] and Cyclops leaving the team to mourn her. Comics writers and historians Roy Thomas and Peter Sanderson observed that "'The Dark Phoenix Saga' is to Claremont and Byrne what 'the Galactus Trilogy' is to Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. It is a landmark in Marvel history, showcasing its creators' work at the height of their abilities."[40][41] The storyline also saw the introduction of recurring antagonists the Hellfire Club, and its Inner Circle consisting of Sebastian Shaw, Emma Frost, Harry Leland, Donald Pierce, along with Mastermind, previously a member of Magneto's Brotherhood. Teenage mutant Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat was introduced in #129 (Jan. 1980) and joined the X-Men in #139. Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, a disco-singing, roller-skating mutant, was introduced in #130 (Feb. 1980), but did not join the team, instead having a solo title.
A new Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, led by Mystique, was introduced in the "Days of Future Past" storyline (#141–142, Jan–Feb 1981) in which a time-travelling Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat tried to avert a dystopian future caused by the Brotherhood assassinating Presidential candidate Senator Robert Kelly.[42] Byrne plotted the story wanting to depict the Sentinels as a genuine threat to the existence of the mutant race.[43] He then left the series after #143, being replaced by a returning Cockrum, who in turn was succeeded by Paul Smith and John Romita Jr.
By the mid-1980s, The Uncanny X-Men had become one of the best-selling American comic books,[44] turning many of the writers and illustrators into industry stars and leading to numerous spin-offs and miniseries.
Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto was gradually revealed to be more complex: #150 established that he was a survivor of the Holocaust, and in #161 it is shown that Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto and Professor Charles Xavier had known each other before Xavier had founded the X-Men. Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, a member of Raven Darkholme/Mystique's Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, defected to the X-Men in #171 (July 1983). Raven Darkholme/Mystique's Brotherhood of Evil Mutants changed sides and became the government-backed Freedom Force in #199. Their first action was to capture Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, who had begun associating with the X-Men during the "Secret Wars II" crossover. Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto surrenders himself, but escapes after his trial is abandoned, he takes over the headmastership of the school after Xavier leaves for space in #200 (Dec. 1985).
The Morlocks, a group of disfigured mutants living underneath New York City, were introduced in #169 (May 1983). Storm became their leader in #170. She was de-powered accidentally by government forces aiming for Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, and met Forge,[45] a mutant with the power of invention. After Storm left the team temporarily to return to her native Africa, Nightcrawler became field leader.
The character Rachel Summers from the future dystopia presented in "Days of Future Past" had been shown to arrive in the present day in New Mutants #18, and then made appearances in Uncanny X-Men from #184 on and was revealed to be Cyclops' daughter.
Claremont attempted to write Scott Summers/Cyclops out of the series, by having him marry Madelyne Pryor in #175 (Nov. 1983); she gave birth to his son in #201 (Jan. 1986). The X-Factor series was launched two months later and featured the original five X-Men. This meant the resurrection of Jean Grey (performed by retcon, the character appearing from #101 having never really been her), and having Scott Summers/Cyclops abandon his wife and child. Claremont strongly objected to the latter, and was hostile towards the title until Louise Simonson became writer.[8]
Artist Arthur Adams began a long association with the team by drawing The Uncanny X-Men Annual #9 (1985) and would serve as the artist on several of the Annuals in the next few years.[46]
The end of 1986 saw the first crossover between X-Men titles, the "Mutant Massacre", which saw a large number of Morlocks killed by the Marauders, acting under orders from the mysterious Nathaniel Essex/Mister Sinister[47] The late 1980s saw several other crossovers: 1988's "Fall of the Mutants"[48] and 1989's "Inferno", which resolved the issue of Madelyne Pryor by revealing her to have been a clone of Jean Grey created by Sinister. The cast was shaken up, with the addition of Psylocke, the Dazzler, Longshot and Havok in early 1987, as well as the first appearances of NPR-TV reporter Manoli Wetherell in #226 (1988),[49] new teenage mutant Jubilation Lee/Jubilee in #244 (1989), and Remy LeBeau/Gambit[50] in Uncanny X-Men #266 (1990). The X-Men left their traditional residence in Westchester County, New York, and lived variously on Alcatraz, Muir Island and in the Australian outback. The "X-Tinction Agenda" crossover, in which the X-Men, X-Factor and the New Mutants fight against the government of Genosha for mutant rights, was published in the fall of 1990.[51]
The title became twice-monthly from 1988 to 1990 every summer, and helped to launch the careers of artists Marc Silvestri and Jim Lee. In 1991 another X-Men title was launched, titled simply X-Men;[52] both titles were now published monthly. Claremont wrote the first three issue of this series, in which the X-Factor and X-Men teams reunited with Professor Xavier at the school. Claremont left Marvel after disputes with Bob Harras and artist Jim Lee (of X-Men). Claremont's final issue of Uncanny X-Men was #279, during the "Muir Island Saga", which is set before those events.[8][53]
1991–2011: Post-Claremont era
[edit]After Claremont's run, the X-Men were divided into two color-coded squads, with a Blue team headlining the adjectiveless X-Men title, while the Gold team, consisting of Warren Worthington III/Archangel, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Jean Grey, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman and Ororo Munroe/Storm, appeared in Uncanny. This roster was later joined by Lucas Bishop, another refugee from the future.[54] After Claremont's departure, Jim Lee continued as plotter, while John Byrne scripted from #281–286. Byrne was replaced as scripter from #287 by Scott Lobdell, who was fully credited as writer from #289. The "X-Cutioner's Song" crossover was released in the fall of 1992[55] and resulted in the outbreak of the Legacy virus, a mutant-specific plague which continued as a story element in X-Men comics until 2001.[53]
Crossovers continued through the 1990s. The "Fatal Attractions" crossover of 1993 saw the X-Men battle Magneto again, and the "Phalanx Covenant" story of 1994 focused mostly on the techno-organic Phalanx. Uncanny X-Men briefly ceased publication during the "Age of Apocalypse" storyline in 1995, which dealt with an alternative present[56] created by a time-travelling assassin killing Xavier; it was replaced by Astonishing X-Men. Lobdell was writing X-Men as well from 1995.
Lobdell was replaced by Steven T. Seagle with issue #350 (Dec. 1997). He was replaced in turn with Alan Davis, as plotter, from issue #366 (Mar. 1999) to #380. Davis's run included "the Twelve" crossover from #370–375, in which Apocalypse sought the only 12 mutants, which also ran in his X-Men title, again being treated as a biweekly publication. As part of the Revolution relaunch, Chris Claremont made a brief return from #381 (June 2000) to #389, at which point he transferred to the new X-Treme X-Men title, as Grant Morrison took over X-Men (vol. 2)[57] and that became the flagship X-Men title.[53] From 2001, Lobdell made a short return, and then Joe Casey and Chuck Austen wrote runs into 2004. The title became bimonthly from 2003 to 2004.[53]
The X-Men: Reload reshuffle of titles in 2004 led to Claremont returning to Uncanny with issue #444. The stories addressed the new status quo established by Morrison. Claremont remained until #473. His final story was "End of the Greys" in 2006, as part of the "Decimation" storyline, where the vast majority of mutants had lost their powers. He was replaced by Ed Brubaker, who wrote a 12-part epic space opera story "The Rise and Fall of the Shi'ar Empire", as a follow-up to his miniseries X-Men: Deadly Genesis. After this, the title led into the "Messiah Complex" crossover event, dealing with the first mutant birth since the Decimation.
Matt Fraction became co-author from #500, and sole author from #504. The entire X-Men team relocated to San Francisco – first to the city, and then, after the "Utopia" crossover with Dark Avengers, to an island named Utopia in San Francisco Bay.[58][59] The Nation X storyline focused on the return of the re-powered Magneto, and him coming to Utopia.[60] The Second Coming crossover saw the return of Hope Summers, the baby from the "Messiah Complex" arc, to the present day, as a young adult; and the emergence of the "Five Lights", the first new mutants to have arisen (apart from Hope) since the Decimation. Nightcrawler was killed during this storyline and the Beast left in protest after his discovery of Cyclops' secret death squad X-Force.[61][62]
Kieron Gillen took over co-authorship of the series with #531, and became sole writer from #534.1.[63][64]
2012: Volume 2
[edit]The original series ended with #544 and relaunched as a new volume after the events of the X-Men: Schism miniseries, wherein half the X-Men, led by Wolverine, returned to New York, to found a new school.[65][66] The new volume featured the Extinction Team, containing members of the X-Men whom Cyclops had retained to deal with potential threats to the mutant race's survival. Gillen's run led into, and crossed over with, the Avengers vs. X-Men storyline and finished with issue #20 in October 2012. The volume ended with Cyclops, who had become increasingly hardline during Gillen's run, in prison for his actions during that storyline.[67] Gillen wrote a five-part epilogue, AvX: Consequences.[68]
2013–2015: Volume 3
[edit]As part of Marvel NOW!, a new volume of Uncanny X-Men was launched in February 2013 with an April 2013 cover date,[69] written by Brian Michael Bendis, who is also writing another X-Men title, All-New X-Men, and drawn by Chris Bachalo.[70] It features Cyclops and remnants of his Extinction Team recruiting new mutants to help them prepare for what Cyclops believes to be an inevitable revolution, coinciding events of the first All-New X-Men story arc.[71] This volume saw Cyclops leading his team to an abandoned Weapon X facility to train new recruits and prepare for impending war against the humans, who see Cyclops as a terrorist's due to his actions in Avengers Vs. X-Men. Eventually, Kitty Pryde and the time-displaced X-Men join his cause after facing a team of X-Men from a dystopian future.[72] It lasted 36 issues, with the final issue reverting to the legacy numbering of Uncanny X-Men #600.
2016–2017: Volume 4
[edit]As part of All-New, All-Different Marvel, Uncanny X-Men was relaunched, written by Cullen Bunn with art by Greg Land. The relaunched Uncanny X-Men team features Magneto leading Psylocke, the Archangel, M, Mystique, Fantomex and Sabretooth, while a different team led by Storm will be called the Extraordinary X-Men. Cyclops's fate after Battleworld is shown to us in the Death of X miniseries (Cyclops was exposed to the Terrigen Mist and died from M-Pox).[73]
The tagline for the relaunched series is "Bigger threats require more threatening X-Men", and is considered to be a continuation of Bunn's previous work on the Magneto solo series. The series will deal with threats that arise as a result of a new, more dangerous world post-Secret Wars. Summing up the team, Bunn states "They're upholding Xavier's dream, but they have no right to do so."[73]
2019: Volume 5
[edit]Announced in August 2018, Uncanny X-Men (vol. 5) debuted November 14, 2018, with the weekly 10-part "X-Men: Disassembled" arc and follows on from the events of the Extermination miniseries.[74] This incarnation of the team features Lucas Bishop, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Jean Grey, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Hank McCoy/the Beast, Laura Kinney/X-23, Lorna Dane/Polaris, Jubilation Lee/Jubilee, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat and Sam Guthrie/Cannonball as well as trainee X-Men Hisako Ichiki/Armor, Victor Borkowski/Anole, Megan Gwynn/Pixie, Idie Okonkwo/Oya, Robert Herman/the Glob, Santo Vaccarro/Rockslide. Following the 10th issue, the series began focusing on a new team of X-Men featuring Scott Summers/Cyclops, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Alex Summers/Havok, Jamie Madrox/the Multiple Man, Rahne Sinclair/Wolfsbane, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Danielle Moonstar/Mirage, Xi'an Coy Minh/Karma.
After this volume, all X-Men titles were cancelled and two intertwining six-issue miniseries written by Jonathan Hickman, called "House of X" and "Powers of X",[75] began a weekly run in July 2019 and concluded on October of the same year. Shortly after those were completed, the X-Men series relaunched with X-Men #1, accompanied by the other related teams' regular series, such as Marauders, X-Force, Excalibur, New Mutants, X-Corp, Wolverine, X-Men: Giant Size, and reviving 1987's Fallen Angels; all part of the 2019 story arc "Dawn of X", which searches to unite all mutantdom and settle down as a whole species.
2024-present: Volume 6
[edit]It was announced that a new Uncanny X-Men series would return. The first issue is scheduled to be released on August 7, 2024, cover-dated October 2024, and will be written by Gail Simone and penciled by David Marquez. The members of this team will be: Wolverine, Gambit, Jubilee, Rogue, and Nightcrawler.
Contributors
[edit]Vol. 1 (1963–2011, 2016)
[edit]Writers
[edit]Years | Writer | Issues |
---|---|---|
1963–1966 | Stan Lee | #1–19 |
1966–1968, 1969–1970 | Roy Thomas | #20–43, #55–64, #66 |
1968 | Gary Friedrich | #44–47 |
1968–1969 | Arnold Drake | #47–54 |
1970 | Dennis O'Neil | #65 |
1970–1975 | Reprints of X-Men #12–45 | #67–93 |
1975 | Len Wein | Giant-Size X-Men #1; #94–95 |
1975–1991, 2000–2001, 2004–2006 | Chris Claremont | #94–279, #381–389, #444–473 |
1978–1981, 1991–1992 | John Byrne | #113–143, #281–285, #288 |
1988 | Tom DeFalco | #228 |
1991 | Fabian Nicieza | #279–280 |
1991–1992 | Jim Lee | #281, #285–288 |
1991–1992 | Whilce Portacio | #281–286, #288 |
1992–1997, 2001 | Scott Lobdell | #286–350, #390–393; #-1 |
1997–1999 | Steven T. Seagle | #350–365 |
1999–2000 | Alan Davis | #366–380 |
2001–2002 | Joe Casey | #394–409 |
2002–2004 | Chuck Austen | #410–443 |
2006 | Tony Bedard | #472–474 |
2006–2008 | Ed Brubaker | #475–503 |
2008–2011 | Matt Fraction | #500–534 |
2011 | Kieron Gillen | #531–544; #534.1 |
2016 | Brian Michael Bendis | #600 |
Pencilers
[edit]Years | Penciler | Issues |
---|---|---|
1963–1965 | Jack Kirby | #1–11 |
1965 | Alex Toth | #12 |
1965–1969 | Werner Roth | #13–22 (as Jay Gavin), #23–29, #31–33, #35, #44–49, #52, #55; #38–43, #47–57 (back-up stories) |
1967 | Jack Sparling | #30 |
1967 | Dan Adkins | #34 |
1967 | Ross Andru | #36–37 |
1967–1970 | Don Heck | #38–42, #48, #52, #54–55, #64 |
1968 | George Tuska | #43; #44–46 (back-up stories) |
1968 | Jim Steranko | #50–51 |
1969, 1984–1987 | Barry Windsor-Smith | #53 (as Barry Smith), #186, #198, #205, #214 |
1969–1970 | Neal Adams | #56–63, #65 |
1970 | Sal Buscema | #66 |
1970–1975 | Reprints of X-Men #12–45 | #67–93 |
1975–1977, 1981–1982 | Dave Cockrum | Giant-Size X-Men #1; #94–105, #107, #145–150, #153–158, #161–164 |
1977 | Bob Brown | #106 |
1977–1981 | John Byrne | #108–109, #111–143 |
1978 | Tony DeZuniga | #110 |
1981–1982 | Brent Anderson | #144, #160 |
1981 | Jim Sherman | #151 |
1981 | Bob McLeod | #151–152 |
1982 | Bill Sienkiewicz | #159 |
1983, 1991 | Paul Smith | #165–170, #172–175, #278 |
1983 | Walt Simonson | #171 |
1983–1986, 1992–1994 | John Romita Jr. | #175–185, #187–197, #199–200, #202–203, #206–211, #287, #300–302, #304, #306–311 |
1986–1989 | Rick Leonardi | #201, #212, #231, #235, #237, #252 |
1986 | June Brigman | #204 |
1986–1987 | Bret Blevins | #211, #219 |
1987, 2004–2005 | Alan Davis | #213, #215, #444–447, #450–451, #455–459, #462–463 |
1987 | Jackson Guice | #216–217 |
1987–1990 | Marc Silvestri | #218, #220–222, #224–230, #232–234, #236, #238–244, #246–247, #249–251, #253–255, #259–261 |
1987 | Kerry Gammill | #223 |
1989 | Rob Liefeld | #245 |
1989–1991 | Jim Lee | #248, #256–258, #267–277 |
1990 | Kieron Dwyer | #262 |
1990 | Bill Jaaska | #263, #265 |
1990 | Mike Collins | #264, #266 |
1991–1992 | Andy Kubert | #279–280, #288 |
1991 | Steven Butler | #280 |
1991–1992, 2010 | Whilce Portacio | #281–286, #289–290, #526–529 |
1992–1993, 1999–2001 | Tom Raney | #291–293, #374, #377, #379–380, #382, #399 |
1992–1993 | Brandon Peterson | #294–299 |
1993 | Richard Bennett Lamas | #303 |
1993 | Jan Duursema | #305 |
1994–1997 | Joe Madureira | #312–313, #316–317, #325–326, #328–330, #332, #334–338, #340–343, #345–348, #350 |
1994 | Lee Weeks | #314 |
1994–1995, 1999, 2006 | Roger Cruz | #315, #318, #320, #324, #327, #376, #473–474 |
1994 | Steve Epting | #319 |
1995, 2002–2003 | Ron Garney | #321, #401–402, #409–412, #421–424, #435–436 |
1995 | Tom Grummett | #322 |
1995–1997 | Bryan Hitch | #323, #331; #-1 |
1996 | Pascual Ferry | #333 |
1996, 2000–2001, 2004, 2007 | Salvador Larroca | #338, #387–392, #437–443, #487–491 |
1996, 1999–2000 | Adam Kubert | #339, #368–370, #372–373, #375, #378, #381 |
1996 | Cedric Nocon | #339 |
1997 | Melvin Rubi | #344–345 |
1997–1999, 2005–2006, 2016 | Chris Bachalo | #349, #353–356, #358–360, #362–363, #365, #464–468, #472, #600 |
1997 | Andy Smith | #350 |
1998 | Ed Benes | #351 |
Cully Hamner | #352 | |
Tommy Lee Edwards | ||
Darryl Banks | ||
J.H. Williams III | ||
John Cassaday | ||
1998, 2008–2011 | Terry Dodson | #352, #500, #504–507, #513–514, #523–525, #535–538 |
1998 | Dan Norton | #357 |
Dexter Vines | ||
Scott Hanna | ||
Ryan Benjamin | #359 | |
Steve Skroce | #361 | |
1999 | Leinil Francis Yu | #364, #366–367 |
Jimmy Cheung | #371 | |
2000 | Graham Nolan | #378 |
2001 | Ian Churchill | #394–396 |
Mel Rubi | #397 | |
2001–2003 | Sean Phillips | #397–398, #400, #404–405, #407–409, #413–415 |
2001–2002 | Ashley Wood | #398, #400 |
2003 | Kia Asamiya | #416–420 |
Philip Tan | #425–426, #429–433 | |
2006–2008 | Billy Tan | #469–471, #475–476, #478–479, #481–482, #484–486, #492–494 |
2006–2007 | Clayton Henry | #477, #480, #483 |
2007 | Mark Bagley | #488 |
2008 | Michael Choi | #495–499 |
2008–2011 | Greg Land | #500–503, #508–511, #515–521, #530–534, #540–544 |
2011 | Carlos Pacheco | #534.1 |
Ibraim Roberson | #539 | |
2016 | Sara Pichelli | #600 |
Mahmud Asrar | ||
Stuart Immonen | ||
David Marquez | ||
Kris Anka | ||
Frazer Irving |
Vol. 2 (2012)
[edit]Writers
[edit]Years | Writer | Issues |
---|---|---|
2012 | Kieron Gillen | #1–20 |
Pencilers
[edit]Years | Penciler | Issues |
---|---|---|
2012 | Carlos Pacheco | #1–3, #9–10, #20 |
Jorge Molina | #2 | |
Rodney Buchemi | #2–3 | |
Paco Diaz | #3, #10 | |
Brandon Peterson | #4 | |
Greg Land | #5–8, #11–12 | |
Billy Tan | #13 | |
Dustin Weaver | #14 | |
Daniel Acuña | #15–17 | |
Michael Del Mundo | #17 | |
Ron Garney | #18 | |
Dale Eaglesham | #19 |
Vol. 3 (2013–2015)
[edit]Writers
[edit]Years | Writer | Issues |
---|---|---|
2013–2015 | Brian Michael Bendis | #1–35 |
Pencilers
[edit]Years | Penciler | Issues |
---|---|---|
2013–2015 | Chris Bachalo | #1–4, #8–9, #12–14, #16–17, #19–22, #25, #27, #29–32 |
Frazer Irving | #5–7, #10–11 | |
Kris Anka | #11, #15, #23–24, #26, #28, #33–34 | |
2014 | Marco Rudy | #18 |
2015 | Valerio Schiti | #35 |
Vol. 4 (2016–2017)
[edit]Writers
[edit]Years | Writer | Issues |
---|---|---|
2016–2017 | Cullen Bunn | #1–19 |
Pencilers
[edit]Years | Penciler | Issues |
---|---|---|
2016–2017 | Greg Land | #1–5, #11–15 |
Ken Lashley | #6–10, #17 | |
2017 | Ibraim Roberson | #15 |
Edgar Salazar | #16, #18–19 |
Vol. 5 (2019)
[edit]Writers
[edit]Years | Writer | Issues |
---|---|---|
2019 | Ed Brisson | #1–10 |
Kelly Thompson | ||
Matthew Rosenberg | #1–22 |
Pencilers
[edit]Years | Penciler | Issues |
---|---|---|
2019 | Mahmud Asrar | #1 |
Mark Bagley | #1 (back-up stories) | |
Mirko Colak | ||
Ibraim Roberson | ||
R.B. Silva | #2, #5, #8 | |
Yıldıray Çınar | #3, #6, #9 | |
Pere Pérez | #4, #7, #10 | |
Salvador Larroca | #11–16, #20–22 | |
Carlos Gomez | #17, #19 | |
Carlos Villa | #18–19 | |
Robert Quinn | #19 | |
David Messina | #22 |
Vol. 6 (2024-present)
[edit]Writers
[edit]Years | Writer | Issues |
---|---|---|
2024-present | Gail Simone | #1-present |
Pencilers
[edit]Years | Penciler | Issues |
---|---|---|
2024-present | David Marquez | #1-present |
Annuals
[edit]Like many comic book series, Uncanny X-Men had an associated double-sized Annual series, once in both 1970 and 1971, then regularly from 1979 to 2001.[76][77] A second series of Uncanny X-Men Annuals began in 2006 as volume 2 issue #1.[78]
Writers
[edit]Years | Writer | Issues |
---|---|---|
1970 | Reprint of X-Men #9, #11 | #1 |
1971 | Reprint of X-Men #22–23 | #2 |
1979–1990 | Chris Claremont | #3–14 (#13, second story, under pseudonym “Sally Pashkow”) |
1988 | Mark Gruenwald | #12 (third story) |
1989 | Terry Austin | #13 |
1989 | Peter Sanderson | #13 (third story) |
1991–1992 | Fabian Nicieza | #15–16 |
1992 | Chris Cooper | #16 (second story) |
1993, 2001 | Scott Lobdell | #17, Annual 2000 |
1994 | Glenn Herdling | #18 |
1994 | Jeph Loeb | #18 (second story) |
1995–1996 | Terry Kavanagh | Annual '95, Annual '96 |
1996 | Howard Mackie | Annual '96 |
1997 | Jorge Gonzalez | Annual '97 |
1998, 2002 | Joe Casey | Annual '98, Annual 2001 |
2000 | Ben Raab | Annual '99 |
2001 | Fiona Avery | Annual 2000 |
Pencilers
[edit]Years | Penciler | Issues |
---|---|---|
1970 | Reprint of X-Men #9, #11 | #1 |
1971 | Reprint of X-Men #22–23 | #2 |
1979 | George Pérez | #3 |
1980 | John Romita Jr. | #4 |
1981 | Brent Anderson | #5 |
1982 | Bill Sienkiewicz | #6 |
1983 | Michael Golden | #7 |
Bret Blevins | ||
1984 | Steve Leialoha | #8 |
1985–1986, 1988, 1990 | Arthur Adams | #9–10, #12, #14 |
1987 | Alan Davis | #11 |
1988 | Ron Lim | #12 (third story) |
1989 | Mike Vosburg | #13 |
Jim Fern | #13 (second story) | |
Mark Bagley | #13 (third story) | |
1990 | Mark Heike | #14 (second story) |
1991 | Tom Raney | #15 |
Jerry DeCaire | #15 (second story) | |
1992 | Jae Lee | #16 |
1993 | Jason Pearson | #17 |
Tom Grummett | #17 (second story) | |
1994 | Ian Churchill | #18 |
Tim Sale | #18 (second story) | |
1995 | Bryan Hitch | Annual '95 |
Bob McLeod | ||
1996 | Nick Gnazzo | Annual '96 |
David Perrin | ||
1997 | Duncan Rouleau | Annual '97 |
1998 | Paul Pelletier | Annual '98 |
Leo Fernandez | ||
2000 | Anthony Williams | Annual '99 |
2001 | Esad Ribić | Annual 2000 |
2002 | Ashley Wood | Annual 2001 |
Team roster
[edit]Volume 1
[edit]Issues | Years | Team roster |
---|---|---|
#1–59 | 1963–1969 | Warren Worthington III/Angel, Hank McCoy/Beast, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Robert "Bobby" Drake/Iceman, Jean Grey/Marvel Girl |
#60–66 |
1969–1970 | Warren Worthington III/Angel, Hank McCoy/Beast, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Alex Summers/Havok, Robert "Bobby" Drake/Iceman, Jean Grey/Marvel Girl, Lorna Dane/Polaris |
#67–93 | 1970–1975 | Warren Worthington III/Angel, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Robert "Bobby" Drake/Iceman, Jean Grey/Marvel Girl
Note: Despite the series being in reprints during this time, the X-Men continued to appear as guest-stars in other Marvel titles. In Amazing Adventures #11 (March 1972), it was revealed in a flashback that Hank McCoy/Beast had left the group sometime before and accepted a position with the Brand Corporation. In another flashback recounted in Incredible Hulk #150 (April 1972), Alex Summers/Havok and Lorna Dane/Polaris also left the group soon after, due to a dispute between Havok and Iceman over Polaris, and moved to New Mexico. It is unknown whether they rejoined the team following the "Secret Empire" storyline in Captain America #172–175 (April–July 1974) and prior to being captured by Krakoa in Giant-Size X-Men #1 (May 1975). |
#94–95 | 1975 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Sean Cassidy/the Banshee, Shiro Yoshida/Sunfire, John Proudstar/Thunderbird |
#96–128 | 1975–1979 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Jean Grey (as Phoenix starting in #101), Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Sean Cassidy/the Banshee |
#129–138 | 1980 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Jean Grey (as Phoenix starting in #101), Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus |
#139–148 | 1980–1981 | Warren Worthington III/the Angel, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Pitor "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Sprite |
#149–170 | 1981–1983 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Ariel |
#171–183 | 1983–1984 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Ariel, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue |
#184–200 | 1984–1985 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Ariel, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Rachel Summers Inactive Scott Summers/Cyclops #184–198 Ororo Munroe/Storm #193–199 Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Ariel and James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine #183–191 |
#201–213 | 1986–1987 | Ororo Munroe/Storm, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat, Rachel Summers, Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto |
#214–245 | 1987–1989 | Alex Summers/Havok, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, Longshot Inactive Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus #214–224 Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat and Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler #214–227 (left) Note: Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto remained allied with the X-Men but was not featured much in the title and was officially left out in #226 |
#246–272 | 1989–1991 | The X-Men are disassembled. The issues variously feature individual characters or small groups who have previously been X-Men or been affiliated with the X-Men. |
#273–280 | 1991 | Sean Cassidy/the Banshee, Forge, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Jubilation Lee/Jubilee, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#281–290 | 1991–1992 | Ororo Munroe/Storm, Jean Grey, Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Forge, Lucas Bishop (Gold team) |
#291–304 | 1992–1993 | Ororo Munroe/Storm, Jean Grey, Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Lucas Bishop (Gold team)
X-Cutioner's Song crossover (#294–296) |
#305–315 | 1993–1994 | Ororo Munroe/Storm, Jean Grey, Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Lucas Bishop (Gold Team) |
#316–317 | 1994 | Phalanx Covenant crossover
Generation X forms as Sean Cassidy/the Banshee, Emma Frost/the White Queen, Jubilation Lee/Jubilee, and Victor Creed/Sabretooth protect Clarice Ferguson/Blink, Monet St. Cross/M, Paige Guthrie/Husk, Everett Thomas/Synch, and Angelo Espinoza/Skin from the Phalanx. |
#318–321 | 1994–1995 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Hank McCoy/the Beast, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Jean Grey, Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Lucas Bishop (Blue and Gold Teams)
Legion Quest crossover (#320–321) |
1995 | Age of Apocalypse event
The series was replaced with Astonishing X-Men for four months during the event. It featured Clarice Ferguson/Blink, Kevin Sydney/Morph, Anna Marie Lehnsherr/Rogue, Victor Creed/Sabretooth, Shiro Yoshida/Sunfire, and Kyle Gibney/Wild Child. | |
#322–334 | 1995–1996 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Hank McCoy/the Beast, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Jean Grey, Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Lucas Bishop, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball Note Uncanny X-Men and X-Men (vol. 2) became tightly linked Hank McCoy/the Dark Beast replaced the Beast in X-Men Unlimited #10 and started impersonating the Beast in Uncanny X-Men #331 and X-Men (vol. 2) #50 |
#335–336 | 1996 | Onslaught event
Scott Summers/Cyclops, Hank McCoy/the Beast, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Jean Grey, Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Lucas Bishop, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball, Joseph |
#337–342 | 1996–1997 | Warren Worthington III/Archangel, Hank McCoy/the Beast, Lucas Bishop, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Joseph, Jean Grey, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#343–349 | 1997 | Hank McCoy/the Beast, Lucas Bishop, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Joseph, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue |
#350–360 | 1997–1998 | Hank McCoy/the Beast, Lucas Bishop, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball, Cecilia Reyes, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Jean Grey, Joseph, Japeth/Maggott, Sarah/Marrow, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#361–372 | 1998–1999 | Piotr "Piotr" Rasputin/Colossus, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde, Sarah/Marrow, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#373–374 | 1999 | Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Sarah/Marrow |
#375–378 | 1999–2000 | The Shattering / The Twelve / Age of Apocalypse crossover
After Charles Xavier/Professor X briefly disbands the team to expose the Skrull infiltrator, the team learns of the Twelve. As Apocalypse's plans come to fruition, many X-Men, as well as the members of the Twelve, come together to battle him, even as he warps reality. |
#379–380 | 2000 | All mutants worldwide are rendered powerless by the High Evolutionary and Mr. Sinister, leading to an interim team battling them after the X-Men briefly disband. |
#381–390 | 2000–2001 | Hank McCoy/the Beast, Nathan Summers/Cable, Remy LeBeau/Gambit, Jean Grey, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Ororo Munroe/Storm |
#391 | 2001 | Scott Summers/Cyclops solo issue |
#392–393 | 2001 | "Eve of Destruction" crossover: While Scott Summers/Cyclops and James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine infiltrate Genosha to save Charles Xavier/Professor X, Jean Grey forms an interim team composed of the Dazzler, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Paulie Provenzano/Omerta, Levi Yoshida/Sunpyre, Hector Rendoza/the Wraith, and a mind-controlled Joanna Cargill/Frenzy. |
#394 | 2001 | Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Jean Grey, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#395–398 | 2001 | Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Jonothan "Jono" Starsmore/Chamber, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#399–414 | 2001–2002 | Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Jonothan "Jono" Starsmore/Chamber, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Miranda Leevald/Stacy X, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#415–443 | 2002–2004 | Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Alex Summers/Havok, Paige Guthrie/Husk, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Jubilation Lee/Jubilee, Cain Marko/the Juggernaut, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Lorna Dane/Polaris, Charles Xavier/Professor X, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#444–454 | 2004–2005 | Lucas Bishop, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Rachel Summers, Tessa/Sage, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#455–474 | 2005–2006 | Lucas Bishop, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Rachel Summers, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#475–486 | 2006–2007 | Darwin, Alex Summers/Havok, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Lorna Dane/Polaris, Charles Xavier/Professor X, Rachel Summers, James Proudstar/Warpath |
#487–491 | 2007 | Caliban, Hepzibah, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Charles Xavier/Professor X, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James Proudstar/Warpath |
#492–494 | 2008 | Messiah Complex crossover
The whole team comes together under Cyclops to protect Hope Summers. Also featuring the debut of the new X-Force team, consisting of Caliban, Hepzibah, James Proudstar/Warpath, Rahne Sinclair/Wolfsbane, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, and Laura Kinney/X-23. |
#495–499 | 2008 | Although divided, the team gradually starts to reform in San Francisco, California. |
#500–507 | 2008–2009 | Warren Worthington III/the Angel, Hank McCoy/the Beast, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, Emma Frost, Xi'an Coy Minh/Karma, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Megan Gwynn/Pixie, the Stepford Cuckoos, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#508–512 | 2009 | Warren Worthington III/the Angel, Hank McCoy/the Beast, Piotr "Peter" Rasoutin/Colossus, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, James Bradley/Doctor Nemesis, Emma Frost, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Xi'an Coy Minh/Karma, Kavita Rao, Madison Jeffries, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Megan Gwynn/Pixie, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, the Stepford Cuckoos, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Yuriko Takiguchi, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#513–514 | 2009 | Dark Avengers / Utopia crossover
All the mutants in San Francisco battle against Norman Osborn's Dark Avengers and the group of Dark X-Men he forms under the Emma Frost/Black Queen, including Tyrone Johnson and Tandy Bowen/Cloak and Dagger, Daken (posing as Wolverine), Hank McCoy/Dark Beast, Calvin Rankin/Mimic, Raven Darkholme/Mystique (posing as Professor X), Namor MacKenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner, and Michael Pointer/Weapon Omega. |
#515–522 | 2009–2010 | Warren Worthington III/the Angel, Tabitha Smith-Boom Boom, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, James Bradley/Doctor Nemesis, Emma Frost, Charlie Cluster-7/Fantomex, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Kavita Rao, Madison Jeffries, Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, Namor MacKenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Megan Gwynn/Pixie, Charles Xavier/Professor X, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Ann Marie LeBeau/Rogue, the Stepford Cuckoos, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#523–525 | 2010 | Second Coming crossover |
#526–529 | 2010 | Warren Worthington III/the Angel, Cecilia Reyes, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, James Bradley/Doctor Nemesis, Emma Frost, Charlie Cluster-7/Fantomez, Hope Summers, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Kavita Rao, Katherine Anne "Kitty' Pryde/Shadowcat, Madison Jeffries, Name MacKenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#530–534 | 2010–2011 | Warren Worthington III/the Angel, Cecilia Reyes, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, James Bradley/Doctor Nemesis, Emma Frost, Charlie Cluster-7/Fantomex, Hope Summers, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Kavita Rao, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat, Madison Jeffries, Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, Namor Mackenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Megan Gwynn/Pixie, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#534.1–544 | 2011 | Warren Worthington III/the Angel, Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, James Bradley/Doctor Nemesis, Emma Frost, Hope Summers, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Kavita Rao, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat, Madison Jeffries, Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, Namor Mackenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Mgean Gwynn/Pixie, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Anna Marie LeBeau/Rogue, Ororo Munroe/Storm, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
Volume 2
[edit]Issues | Years | Team roster |
---|---|---|
#1–20 | 2011–2012 | Piotr "Peter" Rasputin/Colossus, Scott Summers/Cyclops, Danger, Emma Frost, Hope Summers, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, Namor Mackenzie/Namor the Sub-Mariner, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Ororo Munroe/Storm |
Volume 3
[edit]Issues | Years | Team roster |
---|---|---|
#1–11 | 2012–2013 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Emma Frost, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, Eva Bell/Tempus, Christopher Muse/Triage, Fabio Medina/Goldballs, David Bond/Hijack, Benjamin Deeds, the Stepford Cuckoos, Waren Worthington III/the Angel (past) |
#12–13 | 2013 | Battle of the Atom crossover
The X-Men of the Jean Grey School, Scott Summers/Cyclops' X-Men team, the time-displaced original X-Men from the past, and the X-Men from the future fight the Brotherhood of Mutants from the future. |
#14–30 | 2013–2015 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Emma Frost, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat, Lockheed, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, Alex Summers/Havok, Eva Bell/Tempus, Christopher Muse/Triage, Fabio Medina/Goldballs, Benjamin Deeds, David Bond/Hijack, the Stepford Cuckoos, Jean Grey (past), Hank McCoy/the Beast (past), Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman (past), Warren Worthington III/the Angel (past), Laura Kinney/X-23 |
#31 | 2015 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Emma Frost, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Katherine Anne "Kitty' Pryde/Shadowcat, Lockheed, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, Alex Summers/Havok, Christopher Muse/Triage, Fabio Medina/Goldballs, Benjamin Deeds, David Bond/Hijack, the Stepford Cuckoos, Jean Grey (past), Hank McCoy/the Beast (past), Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman (past), Warren Worthington III/the Angel (past), Laura Kinney/X-23 |
#32–35, #600 | 2015 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, Emma Frost, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat, Lockheed, Alison Blaire/the Dazzler, Alex Summers/Havok, Scott Summers/Cyclops (past), Jean Grey (past), Hank McCoy/the Beast (past), Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman (past), Warren Worthington/the Angel (past), Laura Kinney/X-23 |
Volume 4
[edit]Issues | Years | Team roster |
---|---|---|
#1–19 | 2015–2017 | Warren Worthington III/the Archangel, Monet St. Croix/M, Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Victor Creed/Sabretooth, Raven Darkholme/Mystique, Charlie Cluster-7/Fantomex |
Volume 5
[edit]Issues | Years | Team roster |
---|---|---|
#1–10 | 2018–2019 | Warren Worhington III/the Archangel, Hank McCoy/the Beast, Lucas Bishop, Sam Guthrie/Cannonball, Robert "Bobby" Drake/the Iceman, Jean Grey, Jubilation Lee/Jubilee, Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler, Jean-Paul Beaubier/Northstar, Lorna Dane/Polaris, Elizabeth "Betsy" Braddock/Psylocke, Katherine Anne "Kitty" Pryde/Shadowcat, Ororo Munroe/Storm, Laura Kinney/X-23 Students: Vic Borkowski/Anole, Hisao Ichiki/Armor, Robert Herman/Glob Herman, Idie Okonkwo/Oya, Megan Gwynn/Pixie, Santo Vaccaro/Rockslide |
#11 | 2019 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine |
#12–14 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Alex Summers/Havok, Jamie Madrox/the Multiple Man, Rahne Sinclair/Wolfsbane, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Danielle Moonstar/Mirage, Xi'an Coy Manh/Karma | |
#15 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Alex Summers/Havok, Jamie Madrox/the Multiple Man, Rahne Sinclair/Wolfsbane, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Danielle Moonstar/Mirage, Xi'an Coy Manh/Karma, Jonothan "Jono" Starsmore/Chamber | |
#16–18 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Alex Summers/Havok, Jamie Madrox/the Multiple Man, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Xi'an Coy Manh/Karma, Jonothan "Jono" Starsmore/Chamber, Sean Cassidy/the Banshee, Hope Summers, Cain Marko/the Juggernaut | |
#19–22 | Scott Summers/Cyclops, James "Logan" Howlett/Wolverine, Alex Summers/Havok, Jamie Madrox/the Multiple Man, Illyana Rasputin/Magik, Danielle Moonstar/Mirage, Sean Cassidy/the Banshee, Hope Summers, Cain Marko/the Juggernaut |
Timeline
[edit]- Notes
This is an article about the comic book, and thus the publication history, not the in-continuity history. As such, the above reflects the team roster for the book at time of publication. Similarly, this article only reflects the team roster for the X-Men team whose home is this publication.
Professor X is the Headmaster of Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters and mentor to the X-Men, but he is rarely (if ever) a member of the X-Men team. In his role as mentor, he has typically been present in the book, but he has notable absences, including issues #43–64 (dead, later retconned as preparing for the Z'Nox), #200–273 (with Lilandra Neramani in Shi'ar space; replaced as Headmaster by Magneto during most of this absence), #340–351 (in government custody after the Onslaught crisis), #379–386 (educating Cadre K in space), and #495–513 (rebuilding his mind in X-Men: Legacy).
Jean Grey was replaced by the Phoenix Force from issues #101–137. This was a retcon that was only revealed years later.
At many times, the team roster has been the same as that appearing in X-Men (vol. 2) and during two periods, the two books have even been treated by their writer as a single bi-weekly title (issues #289–350 by Scott Lobdell and issues #366–380 by Alan Davis).
During issues #370–372, Wolverine was replaced by a Skrull infiltrator, leading to "The Shattering"/"The Twelve" storylines, and the Astonishing X-Men (vol. 2) limited series.
After moving to San Francisco, many other mutants continually appear as background characters or allies, but apart from during crossovers they are rarely considered part of the team roster.
After the series was relaunched as Uncanny X-Men #1, it featured Cyclops's "Extinction Team", composed of himself, Emma Frost, Namor, Magneto, Storm, Hope Summers, Colossus, Danger and Magik; Psylocke was briefly a member of this team while Emma was injured.
Title
[edit]Issues | Title | Indicia title |
---|---|---|
#1–49 | The X-Men | The X-Men |
#50–93 | X-Men | |
#94–113 | X-Men | |
#114–138 | The Uncanny X-Men | |
#139–141 | The X-Men | |
#142–393 | The Uncanny X-Men | |
#394–407 | Uncanny X-Men | |
#408–544, #600; Vol. 2 #1–20; Vol. 3 #1–35; Vol. 4 #1–19; Vol. 5 #1–22 |
Uncanny X-Men |
Until 2011, Uncanny X-Men remained Marvel Comics' only Silver Age title to retain its consecutive issue numbering since its conception, even during the early 1970s reprint hiatus. The Amazing Spider-Man, The Avengers, The Fantastic Four and other legacy titles have all, at one time or another, restarted their numbering at #1, though all later returned to their original numbering. The final issue to be published under the original numbering was #544, published in October 2011 with a December 2011 cover date, which was followed by a new #1 the following month. In 2015, Marvel released Uncanny X-Men #600, following Vol. 3 #35, as a conclusion to the Brian Michael Bendis' run on both All New X-Men and Vol. 3.
From issue #1-93 the indicia title was The X-Men. After the relaunch with issue #94, and up to #138, the article The was dropped from the indicia title, making it X-Men, but the article was added back in issues #139–141.
The title The Uncanny X-Men was first used in the issue #95 title block following the "Stan Lee Presents:" tagline, though the title did not appear on the covers or indicia titles yet; covers begin displaying this title in #114. Beginning with issue #142[79] and up to #407, the indicia title was finally changed to The Uncanny X-Men. Issue #408 was the first to use the indicia title Uncanny X-Men.
A separate series, titled simply X-Men, launched with an October 1991 cover date.
Collected editions
[edit]Trade paperbacks
[edit]Marvel Masterworks
[edit]Title | Volume | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
Marvel Masterworks: The X-Men | 1 | The X-Men #1–10 | April 2009 | 978-0785136989 |
2 | The X-Men #11–21 | August 2009 | 978-0785137009 | |
3 | The X-Men #22–31 | August 2011 | 978-0785150701 | |
4 | The X-Men #32–42 | December 2011 | 978-0785150725 | |
5 | The X-Men #43–53, The Avengers #53, Ka-Zar #2–3, Marvel Tales #30 | January 2013 | 978-0785117872 | |
6 | The X-Men #54–66 | February 2014 | 978-0785188377 | |
Marvel Masterworks: The Uncanny X-Men | 1 | Giant-Size X-Men #1; Uncanny X-Men #94–100 | December 2009 | 978-0785137023 |
2 | Uncanny X-Men #101–110 | January 2010 | 978-0785137047 | |
3 | Uncanny X-Men #111–121 | January 2011 | 978-0785145707 | |
4 | Uncanny X-Men #122–131, Uncanny X-Men Annual #3 | February 2012 | 978-0785158691 | |
5 | Uncanny X-Men #132–140, Uncanny X-Men Annual #4, Phoenix: The Untold Story (one-shot), material from Bizarre Adventures #27 | July 2012 | 978-0785158721 | |
6 | Uncanny X-Men #141-150 | February 13, 2008 | 978-0785130147 | |
7 | Uncanny X-Men #151-159, Uncanny X-Men Annual #5, Avengers Annual #10 | January 12, 2011 | 978-0785135142 | |
8 | Uncanny X-Men #160-167, Uncanny X-Men Annual #6, X-Men Special Edition #1, Marvel Treasury Edition #26-27 | February 22, 2012 | 978-0785158707 | |
9 | Uncanny X-Men #168-175, Uncanny X-Men Annual #7, Marvel Graphic Novel No. 5 - X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills, Wolverine (vol. 1) #1-4 | February 10, 2015 | 978-0785191544 | |
10 | Uncanny X-Men #176-188, Magik #1-4, material from Marvel Fanfare #40 | February 21, 2017 | 978-1302903602 | |
11 | Uncanny X-Men #189-193, Uncanny X-Men Annual #8, X-Men/Alpha Flight #1-2, Kitty Pryde and Wolverine #1-6 | January 29, 2019 | 978-1302915186 | |
12 | Uncanny X-Men #194-200, Uncanny X-Men Annual #9, New Mutants Special Edition #1, Nightcrawler #1-4, material from Bizarre Adventures #27 | March 3, 2020 | 978-1302922382 | |
13 | Uncanny X-Men #201-209, Longshot #1-6, material from Marvel Fanfare #33 | June 23, 2021 | 978-1302929459 | |
14 | Uncanny X-Men #210-219, Uncanny X-Men Annual #10, New Mutants Annual #2, Fantastic Four vs X-Men #1-4 | March 16, 2022 | 978-1302933449 | |
15 | Uncanny X-Men #220-231, Uncanny X-Men Annual #11, X-Men vs. the Avengers #1-4, material from Best of Marvel Comics | March 15, 2023 | 978-1302949228 | |
16 | Uncanny X-Men #232-243, Uncanny X-Men Annual #12, X-Factor #37-39 | March 26, 2024 | 978-1302955151 |
Essentials
[edit]Title | Volume | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
Essential Classic X-Men | 1 | X-Men #1–24 | June 1999 | 978-1904159636 |
2 | X-Men #25–53; Avengers #53 | May 2006 | 978-0785121169 | |
3 | X-Men #54–66, 67–93 (covers only); Amazing Adventures (vol. 2) #11–17; Marvel Team-Up #4; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #150, #161 | February 2009 | 978-0785130604 | |
Essential X-Men | 1 | X-Men #94–119; Giant-Size X-Men #1 | May 2008 | 978-0785132554 |
2 | X-Men #120–141; Uncanny X-Men #142–144, Uncanny X-Men Annual #3–4 | December 2005 | 978-0785120070 | |
3 | Uncanny X-Men #145–161, Uncanny X-Men Annual #5 | August 2001 | 978-0785106616 | |
4 | Uncanny X-Men #162–179, Uncanny X-Men Annual #6; Marvel Graphic Novel No. 5 - X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills | May 2006 | 978-0785122951 | |
5 | Uncanny X-Men #180–198, Uncanny X-Men Annual #7–8 | April 2007 | 978-0785126928 | |
6 | Uncanny X-Men #199–213; New Mutants Special Edition #1; Uncanny X-Men Annual #9; X-Factor #9–10; New Mutants #46; Thor #373–374; Power Pack #27 | September 2005 | 978-0785117278 | |
7 | Uncanny X-Men #214–228, Uncanny X-Men Annual #10–11; Fantastic Four vs. the X-Men #1–4 | April 2006 | 978-0785120551 | |
8 | Uncanny X-Men #229–245, Uncanny X-Men Annual #12–13; X-Factor #36–39 | December 2007 | 978-0785127635 | |
9 | Uncanny X-Men #246–264, Uncanny X-Men Annual #13 | June 2009 | 978-0785130796 | |
10 | Uncanny X-Men #265–272, Uncanny X-Men Annual #14; Fantastic Four Annual #23; New Mutants #95–97; X-Factor #60-62; material from X-Factor Annual #5 and New Mutants Annual #6 | March 2012 | 978-0785163244 | |
11 | Uncanny X-Men #273–280, Uncanny X-Men Annual #15; X-Factor #69–70; X-Men Vol. 2 #1–3; material from X-Factor Annual #6 and New Mutants Annual #7 | December 2012 | 978-0785166849 |
Panini Pocket Books
[edit]Title | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
Second Genesis | Giant-Size X-Men #1; Uncanny X-Men #94-103 | July 2004 | 978-1904419402 |
Magneto Triumphant | Uncanny X-Men #104-117 | April 2005 | 978-1904419648 |
Wanted, Wolverine! Dead or Alive | Uncanny X-Men #118-124, Annual #3 | September 2005 | 978-1904419808 |
Dark Phoenix | Uncanny X-Men #125-137 | April 2006 | 978-1904419921 |
Days of Future Past | Uncanny X-Men #138-143, Annual #4 | April 2006 | 978-1904419938 |
Rogue Storm | Uncanny X-Men #144-150 | October 2006 | 978-1905239535 |
God Loves, Man Kills | Uncanny X-Men #151-153, Annual #5 | September 2007 | 978-1846530470 |
Night Screams | Uncanny X-Men #154-161 | October 2008 | 978-1846530715 |
Beyond the Farthest Star | Uncanny X-Men #162-167 | March 2009 | 978-1846530814 |
Scarlet In Glory | Uncanny X-Men #169-175 | September 2009 | 978-1846530975 |
Blood Feud | Uncanny X-Men #176-179, Annual #6 and New Mutants #13-14 | March 2010 | 978-1846531125 |
Love and Madness | Uncanny X-Men #180-184 and New Mutants #15-17 | September 2010 | 978-1846531279 |
Legacy of the Lost | Uncanny X-Men #185-191 | March 2011 | 978-1846531385 |
The Gift | Uncanny X-Men #192-194 and X-Men/Alpha Flight #1-2 | September 2013 | 978-1846531842 |
The Trial of Magneto | Uncanny X-Men #195-200 | September 2014 | 978-1846532047 |
The Asgardian War | Uncanny X-Men #201-203, Annual #9 and New Mutants Special Edition #1 | April 2015 | 978-1846532085 |
Epic Collection
[edit]Vol | Title | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Children of the Atom | X-Men #1–23 | December 24, 2014 | 978-0785189046 |
2 | Lonely Are the Hunted | X-Men #24–45; Avengers #53 | December 7, 2016 | 978-0785195832 |
3 | The Sentinels Live | X-Men #46-66; material from Ka-Zar #2-3 and Marvel Tales #30 | November 14, 2018 | 978-1302912758 |
4 | It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn | X-Men #67-93, Annual #1-2; Amazing Adventures (vol. 2) #11–17; Amazing Spider-Man #92; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #150, 161, 172, 180–182; Marvel Team-Up #4, 23; Avengers #110-111; Captain America #172-175; Defenders #15-16; Giant-Size Fantastic Four #4 | July 17, 2019 | 978-1302916039 |
5 | Second Genesis | Giant-Size X-Men #1; Uncanny X-Men #94-110; Iron Fist #14-15; Marvel Team-Up #53, #69-70, Annual #1 | March 29, 2017 | 978-1302903909 |
6 | Proteus | Uncanny X-Men #111–128, Annual #3; Marvel Team-Up #89; Incredible Hulk Annual #7 | August 26, 2020 | 978-1302922528 |
7 | The Fate of the Phoenix | Uncanny X-Men #129-143, Annual #4; Marvel Treasury Edition #26-27; Phoenix: The Untold Story (1984); material from Marvel Team-Up (1972) #100 | March 16, 2021 | 978-1302922535 |
8 | I, Magneto | Uncanny X-Men #144-153, Annual #5; Avengers Annual #10; Bizarre Adventures #27; material from Marvel Fanfare #1-4 | November 30, 2021 | 978-1302929527 |
9 | The Brood Saga | Uncanny X-Men #154-167, Annual #6; Special Edition X-Men #1 | December 26, 2023 | 978-1302948818 |
10 | God Loves, Man Kills | Uncanny X-Men #168-175, Annual #7; Marvel Graphic Novel #5 - X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills; Wolverine #1-4; and material from Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe | December 17, 2024 | 978-1302955595 |
12 | The Gift | Uncanny X-Men #189-198, Annual #8; X-Men/Alpha Flight #1-2; Nightcrawler #1-4 | December 23, 2015 | 978-0785192176 |
17 | Dissolution & Rebirth | Uncanny X-Men #248-267 | August 14, 2019 | 978-1302918477 |
19 | Mutant Genesis | Uncanny X-Men #278-280, Annual #15; X-Factor #65-70; X-Men (vol. 2) #1-3; material from X-Factor Annual #6 and New Mutants Annual #7 | November 29, 2017 | 978-1302903916 |
20 | Bishop's Crossing | Uncanny X-Men #281-288, Annual #16, X-Men (vol. 2) #4-9, X-Men Annual #1, Ghost Rider #26-27 | March 22, 2022 | 978-1302934521 |
21 | X-Cutioner's Song | Uncanny X-Men #289-296, X-Men (vol. 2) #10-16, X-Factor #84-86, X-Force #16-18 | December 13, 2022 | 978-1302948283 |
22 | Legacies | Uncanny X-Men #297-300, Uncanny X-Men Annual #17, X-Men (vol. 2) #17-23, Stryfe's Strike File, and X-Men Unlimited #1 | April 11, 2023 | 978-1302951115 |
23 | Fatal Attractions | Uncanny X-Men #301-306, X-Men (vol. 2) #24-25, X-Men Unlimited #2, Wolverine #75, Gambit #1-4, X-Men: Survival Guide to the Mansion | April 23, 2024 | 978-1302956851 |
X-Men Milestones
[edit]Title | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
Dark Phoenix Saga | X-Men (1963) #129-137 | July 9, 2019 | 978-1302918521 |
Mutant Massacre | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #210-214, X-Factor (1986) #9-11, New Mutants (1983) #46, Thor (1966) #373-374, Power Pack (1984) #27, Daredevil (1964) #238 | August 13, 2019 | 978-1302918538 |
Fall of the Mutants | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #225-227, New Mutants (1983) #59-61, X-Factor (1986) #24-26 | July 30, 2019 | 978-1302918514 |
Inferno | X-Terminators #1-4, Uncanny X-Men (1981) #239-243, X-Factor (1986) #35-39, New Mutants (1983) #71-73 | September 10, 2019 | 978-1302919702 |
X-Tinction Agenda | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #235-238, #270-272; New Mutants (1983) #95-97; X-Factor (1986) #60-62 | October 8, 2019 | 978-1302919689 |
X-Cutioner's Song | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #294-297, X-Factor (1986) #84-86, X-Men (1991) #14-16, X-Force (1991) #16-18, Stryfe's Strike File #1 | November 5, 2019 | 978-1302919733 |
Fatal Attractions | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #298-300, #303-304, 315; X-Factor (1986) #92; X-Force (1991) #25; X-Men Unlimited (1993) #2; X-Men (1991) #25; Wolverine (1988) #75; Excalibur (1988) #71 | November 26, 2019 | 978-1302919726 |
Phalanx Covenant | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #305-306, #312-313, #316-317; Excalibur (1988) #78-80, #82; X-Men (1991) #36-37; X-Factor (1986) #106; X-Force (1991) #38; Wolverine (1988) #85; Cable (1993) #16 | December 31, 2019 | 978-1302920548 |
Onslaught | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #333-337; X-Men (1991) #53-57; Onslaught: X-Men #1; Onslaught: Marvel Universe #1; Onslaught: Epilogue #1; Avengers (1963) #401; Fantastic Four (1961) #415; Wolverine (1988) #104 and Cable (1993) #35 | January 22, 2020 | 978-1302921927 |
Operation: Zero Tolerance | Generation X (1994) 27; X-Men (1991) 65–70; Uncanny X-Men (1981) 346; Wolverine (1988) 115–118; Cable (1993) 45-47 | February 26, 2020 | 978-1302923969 |
Messiah Complex | X-Men: Messiah Complex One-Shot (2007); Uncanny X-Men (1981) 492–494; X-Men (1991) 205–207; New X-Men (2004) 44–46; X-Factor (2005) 25-27 | March 18, 2020 | 978-1302922801 |
Messiah War | X-Force/Cable: Messiah War (2009) 1; Cable (2008) 13–15; X-Force (2008) 14–16; X-Men: Future History - The Messiah War Sourcebook (2009) 1 | May 26, 2020 | 978-1302922849 |
Necrosha | New X-Men (2004) 32; New Mutants (2009) 6–8; X-Force (2008) 11, 21–25; X-Men: Legacy (2008) 231–234; X-Necrosha (2009); X-Necrosha: The Gathering (2009) | September 1, 2020 | 978-1302923952 |
Second Coming | Second Coming: Prepare (2009), Second Coming (2010) 1–2, Uncanny X-Men (1981) 523–525, New Mutants (2009) 12–14, X-Men Legacy (2008) 235–237, X-Force (2008) 26-28 | September 9, 2020 | 978-1302923976 |
Age of X | Age of X Alpha (2011) 1, X-Men Legacy (2008) 245–247, New Mutants (2009) 22–24, Age of X: Universe(2011) 1-2 | October 14, 2020 | 978-1302923938 |
Other trade paperbacks
[edit]Volume 1
[edit]Title | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
X-Men Visionaries: Neal Adams | X-Men #56–63, 65 | July 1996 | 978-0785101987 |
X-Men: The Dark Phoenix Saga | Uncanny X-Men #129–137 | April 2006 | 0-7851-2213-3 |
X-Men: Days of Future Past | Uncanny X-Men #138–143, Uncanny X-Men Annual #4 | October 2004 | 0-7851-1560-9 |
X-Men: Starjammers by Dave Cockrum | Uncanny X-Men #107-8, 154–158, 161–167; X-Men: Spotlight on Starjammers #1-2 | October 2019 | 978-1-302-92046-3 |
Uncanny X-Men: From the Ashes | Uncanny X-Men #168–176 | March 1991 | 0-8713-5615-5 |
Power Pack Classic Volume 2 | Uncanny X-Men #195; Power Pack #11–17; Power Pack & Cloak and Dagger: Shelter from the Storm | May 2010 | 978-0785145929 |
X-Men: Ghosts | Uncanny X-Men #199–209, Uncanny X-Men Annual #10 | May 2013 | 978-0-7851-8449-2 |
X-Men: Mutant Massacre | Uncanny X-Men #210–214; X-Factor #9-11; New Mutants #46; Thor #373–374; Power Pack #27; Daredevil #238 | February 12, 2013 | 978-0785167419 |
X-Men: Fall of the Mutants Volume 1 | Uncanny X-Men #220–227; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #340; New Mutants #55–61 | February 26, 2013 | 978-0785167440 |
X-Men vs. the Brood: Day of Wrath | Uncanny X-Men #232–234; X-Men vs. Brood #1–2 | September 1997 | 0-7851-0558-1 |
X-Men: Inferno Prologue | Uncanny X-Men #228-238; X-Factor #27-32; New Mutants #62-70; New Mutants Annual #4; Uncanny X-Men Annual #12 | December 2014 | 0-7851-9273-5 |
X-Men: Inferno | Uncanny X-Men #239–243; X-Factor #36–39; New Mutants #71–73 | December 1996 | 0-7851-0222-1 |
X-Men Visionaries: Jim Lee | Uncanny X-Men #248, 256–258, 268–269, 273–277 | October 2002 | 978-0785109211 |
X-Men: Mutations | Uncanny X-Men #256–258; Amazing Adventures (vol. 2) #11, 17; X-Factor #15, 24–25 | October 1996 | 0-7851-0197-7 |
X-Men: Psylocke | Psylocke #1-4, Uncanny X-Men (1963) #256-258 | 2010 | 978-0785144397 |
X-Men: Gambit Classic | Uncanny X-Men #265–267; Gambit #1–4 | May 2009 | 0-7851-3729-7 |
X-Men: X-Tinction Agenda | Uncanny X-Men #270–272; X-Factor #60–62; New Mutants #95–97 | December 1998 | 0-7851-0053-9 |
X-Men: Crossroads | Uncanny X-Men #273–277 | September 1998 | 0-7851-0662-6 |
X-Men: The Coming of Bishop | Uncanny X-Men #282–283, 286 (plus pages regarding Bishop from #284–285 and 287) | March 1995 | 0-7851-0099-7 |
X-Men: Bishop's Crossing | Uncanny X-Men #281–293; X-Men (vol. 2) #8 | November 2016 | 978-1302901707 |
X-Men: X-Cutioner's Song | Uncanny X-Men #294–296 (new printing includes #297); X-Factor #84–86; X-Men (vol. 2) #14–16; X-Force #16–18 | May 1994 (new printing December 2016) | 0-7851-0025-3 (new printing 978-1302900304) |
X-Men: Fatal Attractions | Uncanny X-Men #304; X-Factor #92; X-Force #25; X-Men (vol. 2) #25; Wolverine (vol. 2) #75; Excalibur #71 | January 1995 | 0-7851-0065-2 |
Avengers/X-Men: Bloodties | Uncanny X-Men #307; X-Men (vol. 2) #26; Avengers #368–369; West Coast Avengers #101 | April 1995 | 0-7851-0103-9 |
X-Men: The Wedding of Cyclops & Phoenix | Uncanny X-Men #308–310, Uncanny X-Men Annual #18; X-Men (vol. 2) #27–30, X-Men Annual #2; X-Men Unlimited #3; X-Men: The Wedding Album; What If (vol. 2) #60 | October 2012 | 978-0-7851-6290-2 |
Origin of Generation X: Tales of the Phalanx Covenant | Uncanny X-Men #316–317; X-Men (vol. 2) #36–37; X-Factor #106; X-Force #38; Excalibur #82; Wolverine (vol. 2) #85; Cable #16; Generation X #1 | June 2001 | 0-7851-0216-7 |
X-Men: Legion Quest | Uncanny X-Men #320–321; X-Factor #109; X-Men (vol. 2) #40–41 | March 1996 | 0-7851-0179-9 |
X-Men: Age of Apocalypse Prelude | Uncanny X-Men #319–321; X-Factor #108–109; X-Men (vol. 2) #38–41; Cable #20; X-Men: Age of Apocalypse Ashcan Edition | May 2011 | 978-0-7851-5508-9 |
X-Men: Road to Onslaught Volume 1 | Uncanny X-Men #322–326; X-Men: Prime; X-Men (vol. 2) #42–45; X-Men Annual '95; X-Men Unlimited #8 | February 2014 | 978-0-7851-8825-4 |
X-Men: Road to Onslaught Volume 2 | Uncanny X-Men #327–328; X-Men/Clandestine #1–2; X-Men (vol. 2) #46–49; X-Men Annual '95; X-Men Unlimited #9; Sabretooth #1 | July 2014 | 978-07851-8830-8 |
X-Men: Road to Onslaught Volume 3 | Uncanny X-Men #329–332; X-Men/Brood #1–2; X-Men (vol. 2) #50–52; Wolverine (vol. 2) #101; X-Men Unlimited #10; Archangel #1; Xavier Institute Alumni Yearbook | January 2015 | 978-07851-9005-9 |
X-Men Visionaries: Joe Madureira | Uncanny X-Men #325–326, 329–330, 341–343 | August 2000 | 0-7851-0748-7 |
X-Men: Prelude to Onslaught | Uncanny X-Men #333; X-Men (vol. 2) #50; X-Man #15–17; Cable #32–33 | March 2010 | 978-0785144632 |
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol. 1 | Uncanny X-Men #334–335; X-Men (vol. 2) #53–54; Avengers #400–401; Onslaught: X-Men; X-Force #57; Cable #34; The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #444; Fantastic Four #414–415 | December 2007 | 0-7851-2823-9 |
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol. 2 | Uncanny X-Men #336; Excalibur #100; Fantastic Four #415; The Amazing Spider-Man #415; The Sensational Spider-Man #8; Spider-Man #72; Green Goblin #12; Punisher #11; X-Factor #125–126; Wolverine (vol. 2) #104; X-Man #17; X-Men (vol. 2) #55; X-Force #58 | June 2008 | 0-7851-2824-7 |
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol. 3 | Uncanny X-Men #336; Avengers #402; The Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #445; Iron Man #332; Thor #502; Wolverine (vol. 2) #105; Cable #35; X-Men (vol. 2) #55; X-Man #19; X-Force #57 | August 2008 | 0-7851-2825-5 |
X-Men: The Complete Onslaught Epic Vol. 4 | Uncanny X-Men #337; Fantastic Four #416; Iron Man (vol. 2) #6; Cable #36; X-Men (vol. 2) #56–57; Onslaught: Epilogue #1; Onslaught: Marvel #1; X-Men: Road to Onslaught #1 | February 2009 | 0-7851-2826-3 |
X-Men: Onslaught Aftermath | Uncanny X-Men #338-340 and Annual '96-'97; X-Men (vol. 2) #58-61 and Annual '97; X-Men Unlimited #12-14; X-Factor #130 | March 20, 2019 | 978-1302916510 |
X-Men: The Trial of Gambit | Uncanny X-Men #341-350, -1; X-Men (vol. 2) #62-64, -1 | August 2, 2016 | 978-1302900700 |
X-Men: Operation Zero Tolerance | Uncanny X-Men #346, Generation X #26–31, X-Force #67–70, X-Men (vol. 2) 65–70, Wolverine (vol. 2) #115–118, Cable #45–47, X-Man #30 | August 2012 | 978-0785162407 |
X-Men Blue Vol. 0: Reunion | Uncanny X-Men #351-359; X-Men Unlimited #17; Uncanny X-Men/Fantastic Four Annual 1998; Cerebro's Guide to the X-Men | March, 2018 | 978-1302909536 |
X-Men: The Hunt for Professor X | Uncanny X-Men #360-365, X-Men #80-84, 1/2, X-Men Unlimited #22 | June 30, 2015 | 978-0785197201 |
Magneto: Rogue Nation | Uncanny X-Men #366–367; Magneto Rex #1–3; X-Men: The Magneto War; X-Men (vol. 2) #85–87 | March 2002 | 0-7851-0834-3 |
X-Men: The Magneto War | Uncanny X-Men #366–371; Magneto Rex #1–3; X-Men: The Magneto War; X-Men (vol. 2) #85–91; X-Men Annual '99; X-Men Unlimited #23 and material from #24 | October 2018 | 978-1302913762 |
Deathlok: Rage Against the Machine | Uncanny X-Men #371; X-Men (vol. 2) #91; X-Men Annual '99; Cable #58–62; Deathlok #1-11 | February 2015 | 978-0-7851-9291-6 |
X-Men: The Shattering | Uncanny X-Men #372–375; X-Men (vol. 2) #92–95; Astonishing X-Men #1–3; X-Men 1999 Yearbook | July 2009 | 0-7851-3733-5 |
Astonishing X-Men: Deathwish (Apocalypse: The Twelve Prelude) | Uncanny X-Men #375; X-Men (vol. 2) #92, 95; Astonishing X-Men (vol. 2) #1–3 | October 2000 | 0-7851-0754-1 |
X-Men vs. Apocalypse Vol. 1: The Twelve | Uncanny X-Men #376–377; Cable #75–76; X-Men (vol. 2) #96–97; Wolverine (vol. 2) #146–147 | March 2007 | 0-7851-2263-X |
X-Men vs. Apocalypse Vol. 2: Ages of Apocalypse | Uncanny X-Men #378; Cable #77; Wolverine (vol. 2) #148; X-Men Unlimited #26; X-Men (vol. 2) #98; X-Men: The Search for Cyclops #1–4 | October 2008 | 0-7851-2264-8 |
X-Men: Powerless | Uncanny X-Men #379–380; Cable #78; X-Force #101; Wolverine (vol. 2) #149; X-Men (vol. 2) #99 | August 2010 | 0-7851-4677-6 |
Avengers/X-Men: Maximum Security | Uncanny X-Men #387; Maximum Security: Dangerous Planet #1–3; Captain America (vol. 3) #36; Thor (vol. 2) #30; Bishop: The Last X-Man #15; Iron Man (vol. 3) #35; Avengers (vol. 4) #35; Gambit (vol. 3) #23; X-Men (vol. 2) #107; X-Men Unlimited #29 | November 2010 | 0-7851-4499-4 |
X-Men: Dream's End | Uncanny X-Men #388–390; Cable #87; Bishop #16; X-Men (vol. 2) #108–110 | December 2004 | 0-7851-1551-X |
X-Men: Eve of Destruction | Uncanny X-Men #391–393; X-Men (vol. 2) #111–113 | May 2005 | 0-7851-1552-8 |
Poptopia (Uncanny X-Men) | Uncanny X-Men #394–399 | February 2002 | 0-7851-0801-7 |
X-Men: X-Corps | Uncanny X-Men #394–409, Uncanny X-Men Annual 2001 | October 2013 | 978-0785185024 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 1: Hope | Uncanny X-Men #410–415 | January 2003 | 0-7851-1060-7 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 2: Dominant Species | Uncanny X-Men #416–420 | July 2003 | 0-7851-1132-8 |
X-Men - Unstoppable | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #410-424, X-Men Unlimited (1993) #44-45 | February 12, 2019 | 978-1302916121 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 3: Holy War | Uncanny X-Men #421–427 | October 2003 | 0-7851-1133-6 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 4: The Draco | Uncanny X-Men #428–434 | March 2004 | 0-7851-1134-4 |
X-Men: Trial of the Juggernaut | Uncanny X-Men #425-436; Exiles #28-30; material from X-Men Unlimited #40, 48 | October 2019 | 978-1302920371 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 5: She Lies with Angels | Uncanny X-Men #437–441 | July 2004 | 0-7851-1196-4 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 6: Bright New Mourning | Uncanny X-Men #435–436, 442–443; New X-Men #155–156 | August 2004 | 0-7851-1406-8 |
X-Men: Reloaded | Uncanny X-Men #437-443, New X-Men #155–156, X-Men 157-164 | September 2020 | 978-1302924010 |
Uncanny X-Men – The New Age Vol. 1: The End of History | Uncanny X-Men #444–449 | December 2004 | 0-7851-1535-8 |
X-Men: Reload By Chris Claremont Vol. 1: The End of History | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #444-461, X-Men (1991) #165 | December 2018 | 9781302913786 |
Uncanny X-Men – The New Age Vol. 2: The Cruelest Cut | Uncanny X-Men #450–454 | February 2005 | 0-7851-1645-1 |
Uncanny X-Men – The New Age Vol. 3: On Ice | Uncanny X-Men #455–461 | August 2005 | 0-7851-1649-4 |
X-Men: Reload By Chris Claremont Vol. 2: House of M | Uncanny X-Men (1981) #462-474, Decimation: House of M - The Day After #1, Uncanny X-Men Annual (2006) #1 | December 2019 | 978-1302920531 |
House of M: Uncanny X-Men | Uncanny X-Men #462–465; Secrets of the House of M | February 2006 | 0-7851-1663-X |
Uncanny X-Men – The New Age Vol. 4: End of Greys | Uncanny X-Men #466–471 | June 2006 | 0-7851-1664-8 |
Uncanny X-Men – The New Age Vol. 5: First Foursaken | Uncanny X-Men #472–474, Uncanny X-Men Annual #1 | October 2006 | 0-7851-2323-7 |
Uncanny X-Men: Rise and Fall of the Shi'ar Empire | Uncanny X-Men #475–486 | January 2008 | 978-0-7851-1800-8 |
Uncanny X-Men: The Extremists | Uncanny X-Men #487–491 | December 2007 | 0-7851-1982-5 |
X-Men: Endangered Species | X-Men (vol. 2) #200–204; Uncanny X-Men #488–491; New X-Men (vol. 2) #40–42; X-Factor (vol. 3) #21–24; X-Men: Endangered Species one-shot | ???? | 9780785128205 |
X-Men: Messiah Complex | X-Men: Messiah Complex (one-shot); Uncanny X-Men #492–494; X-Men #205–207; New X-Men #44–46; X-Factor #25–27; X-Men: Messiah Complex – Mutant Files | November 2008 | 0-7851-2320-2 |
Uncanny X-Men: Divided We Stand | Uncanny X-Men #495–499 | October 2008 | 0-7851-1983-3 |
Uncanny X-Men: Manifest Destiny | Uncanny X-Men #500–503; X-Men Free Comic Book Day #1; X-Men: Manifest Destiny #1–5 | October 2009 | 0-7851-2451-9 |
Uncanny X-Men: Lovelorn | Uncanny X-Men #504–507, Uncanny X-Men Annual #2 | June 2009 | 0-7851-2999-5 |
Uncanny X-Men: Sisterhood | Uncanny X-Men #508–512 | August 2009 | 0-7851-4105-7 |
Uncanny X-Men: The Complete Collection by Matt Fraction Vol. 1 | Uncanny X-Men #500–511, Uncanny X-Men Annual #2, X-Men Unlimited #9, Divided We Stand #1 | March 2013 | 0-7851-6593-2 |
Uncanny X-Men: The Complete Collection by Matt Fraction Vol. 2 | Uncanny X-Men #512–519, Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia, Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Exodus, Dark Avengers #7-8, Dark Reign: The List - X-Men, material from Dark Reign: The Cabal | April 2013 | 0-7851-6594-0 |
Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia | Uncanny X-Men #513–514; Dark Avengers #7–8; Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia; Utopia Finale | April 2010 | 0-7851-4234-7 |
Uncanny X-Men: Nation X | Uncanny X-Men #515–522; Dark Reign: The List – X-Men; Nation X #1–4 | November 2010 | 0-7851-4103-0 |
Uncanny X-Men: The Complete Collection by Matt Fraction Vol. 3 | Uncanny X-Men #520-522,526–534, Uncanny X-Men: The Heroic Age (one-shot) | June 2013 | 0-7851-8450-3 |
X-Men: Second Coming | Second Coming: Prepare, Second Coming #1–2, Uncanny X-Men #523–525, New Mutants #12–14, X-Men: Legacy #235–237, X-Force #26–28 | June 2011 | 0785157050 |
Uncanny X-Men: The Five Lights (a.k.a. Uncanny X-Men: The Birth of Generation Hope) | Uncanny X-Men #526–529; Uncanny X-Men: The Heroic Age (one-shot) | December 2010 | 978-0-7851-4643-8 |
Uncanny X-Men: Quarantine | Uncanny X-Men #530–534 | June 2011 | 0-7851-5225-3 |
Uncanny X-Men: Breaking Point | Uncanny X-Men #534.1; 535–539 | September 2011 | 978-0-7851-5226-2 |
Fear Itself: Uncanny X-Men | Uncanny X-Men #540–544 | March 2012 | 0-7851-5797-2 |
Volume 2
[edit]Title | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 1: Everything is Sinister | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 2) #1–4 | March 28, 2012 | Hardcover: 978-0785159933
Paperback: 978-0785159940 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 2: Tabula Rasa | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 2) #5–10 | June 20, 2012 | Hardcover: 978-0785159957
Paperback: 978-0785159964 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 3: AvX: Book 1 | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 2) #11–14 | October 3, 2012 | Hardcover: 978-0785159971
Paperback: 978-0785159988 |
Uncanny X-Men Vol. 4: AvX: Book 2 | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 2) #15–20 | December 12, 2012 | Hardcover: 978-0785165293
Paperback: 978-0785165309 |
Volume 3
[edit]Title | Material collected | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
Uncanny X-Men Volume 1: Revolution | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #1–5 | July 23, 2013 | Hardcover: 978-0785168461
Paperback: 978-0785167020 |
Uncanny X-Men Volume 2: Broken | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #6–11 | November 26, 2013 | Hardcover: 978-0785167853
Paperback: 978-0785167037 |
X-Men: Battle of the Atom | X-Men: Battle of the Atom #1-2; All-New X-Men #16-17; X-Men (vol. 4) #5-6; Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #12-13; Wolverine and the X-Men #36-37 | January 21, 2014 | Hardcover: 978-0785189060
Paperback: 978-1846535727 |
Uncanny X-Men Volume 3: The Good, the Bad, the Inhuman | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #14–18 | May 27, 2014 | Hardcover: 978-0785154310
Paperback: 978-0785189374 |
Uncanny X-Men Volume 4: X-Men vs. S.H.I.E.L.D. | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #19-25 | October 7, 2014 | Hardcover: 978-1846536281
Paperback: 978-0785189381 |
Uncanny X-Men/Iron Man/Nova: No End in Sight | Uncanny X-Men Special #1; Iron Man Special #1; Nova Special #1 | November 18, 2014 | Paperback: 978-0785191056 |
Uncanny X-Men Volume 5: The Omega Mutant | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #26-31 | April 7, 2015 | Hardcover: 978-0785154907
Paperback: 978-0785189398 |
Uncanny X-Men Volume 6: Storyville | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #32-35; Uncanny X-Men #600 | August 11, 2015 | Hardcover: 978-0785192305
Paperback: 978-0785192312 |
Volume 4
[edit]Title | Material collected | Pages | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
Uncanny X-Men: Superior Vol. 1 - Survival of the Fittest | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 4) #1–5 | 112 | July 12, 2016 | Paperback: 978-0785196075 |
X-Men: Apocalypse Wars | All-New X-Men (vol. 2) #9-11, Extraordinary X-Men #8-12, Uncanny X-Men (vol. 4) #6-10 | 336 | October 18, 2016 | Hardcover: 978-1302902452 |
Uncanny X-Men: Superior Vol. 2 - Apocalypse Wars | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 4) #6–10 | 112 | November 29, 2016 | Paperback: 978-0785196082 |
Uncanny X-Men: Superior Vol. 3 - Waking from the Dream | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 4) #11–15, Uncanny X-Men Annual (vol. 4) #1 | 112 | February 7, 2017 | Paperback: 978-1302903138 |
Uncanny X-Men: Superior Vol. 4 - IvX | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 4) #16–19, Uncanny X-Men Annual (vol. 4) #1 | 128 | July 5, 2017 | Paperback: 978-1302905255 |
Volume 5
[edit]Title | Material collected | Pages | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
Uncanny X-Men: Disassembled | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 5) #1–10 | 248 | April 2, 2019 | Paperback: 978-1302914868 |
Uncanny X-Men: Cyclops and Wolverine Volume 1 | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 5) #11–16 | 136 | July 2, 2019 | Paperback: 978-1302915827 |
Uncanny X-Men: Cyclops and Wolverine Volume 2 | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 5) #17–22 | 136 | October 1, 2019 | Paperback: 978-1302915834 |
War of the Realms: Uncanny X-Men | War of the Realms: Uncanny X-Men #1–3; Uncanny X-Men (vol. 5) #17; War of the Realms: War Scrolls #2 (B- and C-stories only) | 112 | November 12, 2019 | Paperback: 978-1302919191 |
Hardcovers
[edit]Marvel Masterworks
[edit]Title | Volume | Material collected | Pages | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marvel Masterworks: The X-Men | 1 | The X-Men #1–10 | 241 | May 2002 | 0-7851-0845-9 |
2 | The X-Men #11–21 | 240 | November 2003 | 0-7851-0983-8 | |
3 | The X-Men #22–31 | 224 | September 2003 | 0-7851-1269-3 | |
4 | The X-Men #32–42 | 240 | September 2004 | 0-7851-1607-9 | |
5 | The X-Men #43–53; The Avengers #53; Ka-Zar #2–3; Marvel Tales #30 | 304 | July 2005 | 0-7851-1787-3 | |
6 | The X-Men #54–66 | 320 | January 2006 | 0-7851-2056-4 | |
7 | Amazing Adventures (vol. 2) #11–17; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #150, 161; Amazing Spider-Man #92; Marvel Team-Up #4; The X-Men #67–80, The X-Men Annual #1–2 (covers only) | 256 | October 2008 | 0-7851-3048-9 | |
8 | Avengers #110–111; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #172, 180–181; Captain America #172–175; Marvel Team-Up #23, 38; Defenders #15–16; Giant-Size Fantastic Four #4; The X-Men #81–93 (covers only) | 304 | March 2010 | 0-7851-4222-3 | |
Marvel Masterworks: The Uncanny X-Men | 1 | Giant-Size X-Men #1; Uncanny X-Men #94–100 | 176 | December 2003 | 0-7851-1192-1 |
2 | Uncanny X-Men #101–110 | 192 | December 2004 | 0-7851-1193-X | |
3 | Uncanny X-Men #111–121 | 208 | March 2004 | 0-7851-1194-8 | |
4 | Uncanny X-Men #122–131, Uncanny X-Men Annual #3 | 224 | October 2004 | 0-7851-1630-3 | |
5 | Uncanny X-Men #132–140, Uncanny X-Men Annual #4; Phoenix: The Untold Story (one-shot) | 312 | January 2005 | 0-7851-1698-2 | |
6 | Uncanny X-Men #141–150 | 256 | January 2008 | 978-0785130130 | |
7 | Uncanny X-Men #151–159, Uncanny X-Men Annual #5; Avengers Annual #10 | 304 | January 2011 | 978-0785135135 | |
8 | Uncanny X-Men #160–167, Uncanny X-Men Annual #6; X-Men Special Edition #1; Marvel Treasury Edition #26–27 | 288 | February 2012 | 978-0785158707 | |
9 | Uncanny X-Men #168–175, Uncanny X-Men Annual #7; Marvel Graphic Novel No. 5 - X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills; Wolverine (vol. 2) #1–4 | 432 | January 2015 | 978-0785191544 | |
10 | Uncanny X-Men #176–188; Magik #1–4; material from Marvel Fanfare #40 | 456 | February 2017 | 978-1302903602 | |
11 | Uncanny X-Men #189–193, Uncanny X-Men Annual #8; X-Men/Alpha Flight #1–2; Kitty Pryde and Wolverine #1–6 | 464 | January 2019 | 978-1302915186 | |
12 | Uncanny X-Men #194–200, Uncanny X-Men Annual #9, New Mutants Special Edition #1, Nightcrawler #1–4, material from Bizarre Adventures #27 | 464 | March 2020 | 978-1302922382 | |
13 | Uncanny X-Men #201–209, Longshot #1–6, material from Marvel Fanfare #33 | 496 | June 2021 | 978-1302929459 | |
14 | Uncanny X-Men #210-219, Uncanny X-Men Annual #10, New Mutants Annual #2 and Fantastic Four vs. X-Men #1-4 | 496 | April 2022 | 978-1302933449 | |
15 | Uncanny X-Men #220-231, X-Men Annual #11, X-Men vs. Avengers #1-4 and material from Best of Marvel Comics. | 520 | March 14, 2023 | 978-1302949228 | |
16 | Uncanny X-Men #232-243, X-Men Annual #12, X-Factor #37-39 | 496 | March 26, 2024 | 978-1302955151 |
Oversized hardcovers (OHCs)
[edit]Title | Material collected | Pages | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
X-Men: The Dark Phoenix Saga | Uncanny X-Men #129–138; Classic X-Men #43; material from Bizarre Adventures #27; Phoenix: The Untold Story (one-shot); What If? #27 | 352 | July 2010 | 978-0785149132 |
X-Men: Asgardian Wars | X-Men/Alpha Flight #1–2; New Mutants Special Edition #1; Uncanny X-Men Annual #9 | 248 | February 2010 | 978-0785141488 |
X-Men: Mutant Massacre | Uncanny X-Men #210-214, X-Factor #9-11, New Mutants #46, Thor #373-374, Power Pack #27, and Daredevil #238 | 320 | January 2010 | 0-7851-3805-6 |
X-Men: Fall of the Mutants | Uncanny X-Men #220–227; New Mutants #55–61; X-Factor #18–26; Captain America #339; Daredevil #252; Fantastic Four #312; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #340; Power Pack #35 | 824 | October 2011 | 978-0785153122 |
X-Men: Inferno Prologue | Uncanny X-Men #228-238, Annual #12; New Mutants #62-70, Annual #4; X-Factor #27-32, Annual #3; material from Marvel Age Annual #4 and Marvel Fanfare #40 | 824 | December 2014 | 978-0785192732 |
X-Men: Inferno | Uncanny X-Men #239–243; New Mutants #71–73; X-Factor #33–40, material from Annual #4; X-Terminators #1–4 | 600 | June 2009 | 978-0785137771 |
X-Men: Inferno Crossovers | Power Pack (1984) #40, 42–44; Avengers (1963) #298-300; Fantastic Four (1961) #322-324; Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #311-313; Spectacular Spider-Man (1976) #146-148; Web of Spider-Man (1985) #47-48; Daredevil (1964) #262-263, 265; Excalibur (1988) #6-7; Mutant Misadventures of Cloak and Dagger (1988) #4 | 608 | September 2010 | 978-0785146711 |
X-Men: Days of Future Past | Uncanny X-Men #141–142, Uncanny X-Men Annual #14; X-Factor Annual #5; New Mutants Annual #6; material from Fantastic Four Annual #23; Excalibur #52, 66–67; Wolverine: Days of Future Past #1–3; material from Hulk: Broken Worlds #2 | 392 | March 2014 | 978-0785184423 |
X-Men: X-Tinction Agenda | Uncanny X-Men #235–238 and 270–272; New Mutants #95–97; X-Factor #60–62 | 304 | August 2011 | 978-0785155317 |
X-Men: Bishop's Crossing | Uncanny X-Men #281–293, X-Men (vol. 2) #12–13 and material from #10–11 | 392 | October 2012 | 978-0785153498 |
X-Men: X-Cutioner's Song | Uncanny X-Men #294–297; X-Factor #84–86; X-Men (vol. 2) #14–16; X-Force #16–18; Stryfe's Strike File | 368 | October 2011 | 978-0785153122 |
X-Men: Fatal Attractions | Uncanny X-Men #298–305 and 315, Annual #17; X-Factor #87–92; X-Men Unlimited #1–2; X-Force #25; X-Men (vol. 2) #25; Wolverine (vol. 2) #75; Excalibur #71 | 816 | April 2012 | 978-0785162452 |
X-Men: The Wedding of Cyclops & Phoenix | Uncanny X-Men #307-310, Annual #18; X-Men (vol. 2) #26-35; Avengers #368-369; Avengers West Coast #101; Cable #6-8; X-Men Unlimited #3; X-Men: The Wedding Album; What If? (vol. 2) #60; The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix #1-4; material from Marvel Valentine Special | 832 | September 2018 | 978-1302913229 |
X-Men: Phalanx Covenant | Uncanny X-Men #306, 311–314, 316–317; Excalibur #78–82; X-Men (vol. 2) #36–37; X-Factor #106; X-Force #38; Wolverine (vol. 2) #85; Cable #16 | 552 | February 2014 | 978-0785185499 |
X-Men: LegionQuest | Uncanny X-Men #318–321; X-Men (vol. 2) #38-41, X-Men Annual #3; X-Men Unlimited #4-7; X-Factor #107-109; Cable #20 | 592 | April 2018 | 978-1302910389 |
X-Men: Operation Zero Tolerance | Uncanny X-Men #346; X-Men (vol. 2) #65–70; Generation X #26–31; X-Force #67–70; Wolverine (vol. 2) #115–118; Cable #45–47; X-Man #30 | 640 | April 2012 | 978-0785162407 |
X-Men: Eve of Destruction | Uncanny X-Men #390-393 and Annual 2000; X-Men (vol. 2) #110-113; X-Men Unlimited #30-33; X-Men: Forever #1-6; X-Men: Declassified; X-Men: The Search for Cyclops #1-4; Magneto: Dark Seduction #1-4 | 808 | July 2019 | 978-1302918255 |
House of M | House of M #1–8; The Pulse Special Edition; Secrets of the House of M | 312 | January 2008 | 978-0785124665 |
House of M: Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, and X-Men | Uncanny X-Men #462–465; Spider-Man: House of M #1–5; New Thunderbolts #11; Fantastic Four: House of M #1–3; Black Panther #7 | 344 | December 2009 | 978-0785138815 |
Uncanny X-Men: Rise & Fall of the Shi'Ar Empire | Uncanny X-Men #475–486 | 312 | July 2007 | 0-7851-2515-9 |
X-Men: Messiah Complex | X-Men: Messiah Complex (one-shot); Uncanny X-Men #492–494; X-Men (vol. 2) #205–207; New X-Men #44–46; X-Factor #25–27 | 352 | April 2008 | 0-7851-2899-9 |
Uncanny X-Men: Manifest Destiny | Uncanny X-Men #500–503; X-Men Free Comic Book Day #1; X-Men: Manifest Destiny #1–5 | 200 | May 2009 | 0-7851-3817-X |
Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia | Uncanny X-Men #513–514; Dark Avengers #7–8; Dark Avengers/Uncanny X-Men: Utopia; Utopia Finale | 368 | November 2009 | 0-7851-4233-9 |
Uncanny X-Men: Nation X | Uncanny X-Men #515–522; Dark Reign: The List – X-Men; Nation X #1–4 | 360 | June 2010 | 0-7851-3873-0 |
X-Men: Second Coming | Second Coming: Prepare, Second Coming #1–2, Uncanny X-Men #523–525, New Mutants #12–14, X-Men: Legacy #235–237, X-Force #26–28 | 392 | September 2010 | 0-7851-4678-4 |
Avengers vs. X-Men | Avengers vs X-Men #0-12; Avengers vs X-Men: Vs #1-6; Avengers vs X-Men: Infinite #1, 6 and 10; material from Point One #1 | 568 | November 2012 | 978-0785168058 |
Avengers vs X-Men Companion | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 2) #11-20; AVX: Consequences #1-5; X-Men Legacy #266-270; Wolverine & The X-Men #9-16, 18; A-Babies VS. X-Babies #1; Avengers Academy #29-33; Secret Avengers #26-28; Avengers #25-30; New Avengers #24-30 | 1112 | May 2013 | 978-0785168515 |
Uncanny X-Men by Bendis Vol.1 | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #1-11, 14, 15.INH, 16-18 | 360 | February 2016 | 978-0785195320 |
X-Men: Battle of the Atom | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #12-13; X-Men: Battle of the Atom #1-2; All-New X-Men #16-17; X-Men (vol. 4) #5-6; Wolverine and the X-Men #36-37 | 248 | January 2014 | 978-0785189060 |
Uncanny X-Men by Bendis Vol.2 | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 3) #19-35, 600, Annual #1; All-New X-Men Annual #1 | 496 | December 2016 | 978-1302901714 |
X-Men: Apocalypse Wars | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 4) #6-10; Extraordinary X-Men #8-12; All-New X-Men (vol. 2) #9-11 | 328 | September 2016 | 978-1302902452 |
Uncanny X-Men: Disassembled | Uncanny X-Men (vol. 5) #1-10 | 272 | March 2021 | 978-1302915018 |
Omnibus editions
[edit]Title | Material collected | Pages | Publication date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
The X-Men Omnibus Vol. 1 | The X-Men #1–31 | 768 | October 2008 | 978-0785129585 |
776 | January 2022 | 978-1302932893 | ||
The X-Men Omnibus Vol. 2 | The X-Men #32–66; Avengers #53; Ka-Zar #2–3; Marvel Tales #30; Not Brand Echh #4, #8 | 912 | May 2011 | 978-0785153078 |
920 | February 2022 | 978-1302933739 | ||
Uncanny X-Men Omnibus Vol. 1 | Giant-Size X-Men #1; Uncanny X-Men #94–131, Annual #3 | 848 | May 2006 | 978-0785121015 |
September 2013 | 978-0785185697 | |||
May 2016 | 978-1302900830 | |||
July 2020 | 978-1302924805 | |||
X-Men: The Dark Phoenix Saga Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #97–105, 107–108, 125–138; Phoenix: The Untold Story (one-shot); material from Classic X-Men #6, 8, 13, 18, 24, 43; material from Bizarre Adventures #27; What If? #27 | 688 | August 2018 | 978-1302912123 |
Phoenix Omnibus Volume 1 | Uncanny X-Men #97–105, 107–108, 125–138; Phoenix: The Untold Story (one-shot); material from Classic X-Men #6, 8, 13, 18, 24, 43; material from Bizarre Adventures #27; What If? #27 | 688 | May 2022 | 978-1302945763 |
Phoenix Omnibus Volume 2 | Uncanny X-Men #141-142, 168–176, 184, 189, 201–203, 207–209, 221–222, 239–243; Avengers #263, Fantastic Four #286, X-Factor #1, 13, 18, 35–39; Excalibur #42-50, 66-67 | 2023 | ||
Uncanny X-Men Omnibus Vol. 2 | Uncanny X-Men #132–153, Annual #4–5; Avengers Annual #10; Marvel Fanfare #1–4; Marvel Treasury Edition #26–27; Marvel Team-Up #100; material from Bizarre Adventures #27; Phoenix: The Untold Story (one-shot) | 912 | April 2014 | 978-0785185727 |
October 2016 | 978-1302901660 | |||
November 2020 | 978-1302926342 | |||
Uncanny X-Men Omnibus Vol. 3 | Uncanny X-Men #154–175, Annual #6–7; Marvel Graphic Novel No. 5 - X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills; Wolverine (1982) #1–4; X-Men Special Edition #1; Magik #1–4 | 1056 | February 2016 | 978-0785199229 |
January 2021 | 978-1302927028 | |||
Uncanny X-Men Omnibus Vol. 4 | Uncanny X-Men #176–193, Annual #8, Kitty Pryde and Wolverine #1–6, X-Men/Alpha Flight #1–2, material from Marvel Fanfare (1982) #40 | 848 | March 2021 | 978-1302927042 |
Uncanny X-Men Omnibus Vol. 5 | Uncanny X-Men #194-209, Annual #9-10, New Mutants Special Edition #1, Nightcrawler (1985) #1-4, Longshot (1985) #1-6, material from Marvel Fanfare (1982) #33 | 1064 | June 2023 | 978-1302948719 |
X-Men: Mutant Massacre Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #210–219, Annual #11; New Mutants #46; X-Factor #9-17, Annual #2; Thor #373–374, 377–378; Power Pack #27; Daredevil #238; Fantastic Four vs. the X-Men #1-4; X-Men vs. the Avengers #1-4 | 952 | November 2018 | 978-1302914240 |
December 2021 | 978-1302931605 | |||
X-Men: Fall of the Mutants Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #220–227; New Mutants #55–61; X-Factor #18–26; Captain America #339; Daredevil #252; Fantastic Four #312; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #340; Power Pack #35 | 824 | May 2022 | 978-1302934118 |
X-Men: Inferno Prologue Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #228-238, Annual #12; New Mutants #62-70, Annual #4; X-Factor #27-32, Annual #3; material from Marvel Age Annual #4 and Marvel Fanfare #40 | 824 | September 2021 | 9781302931360 |
X-Men: Inferno Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #239–243; New Mutants #71–73; X-Factor #33–40, material from Annual #4; X-Terminators #1–4; Power Pack (1984) #40, 42–44; Avengers (1963) #298-300; Fantastic Four (1961) #322-324; Amazing Spider-Man (1963) #311-313; Spectacular Spider-Man (1976) #146-148; Web of Spider-Man (1985) #47-48; Daredevil (1964) #262-263, 265; Excalibur (1988) #6-7; Mutant Misadventures of Cloak and Dagger (1988) #4 | 1240 | March 2021 | 978-1302928544 |
X-Men by Chris Claremont and Jim Lee Omnibus Vol. 1 | Uncanny X-Men #244–269, Annual #13; Classic X-Men #39 | 720 | October 2011 | 978-0785158226 |
January 2021 | 978-1302927127 | |||
X-Men: X-Tinction Agenda Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #270–272, Annual #14-15; New Mutants #95-97; X-Factor #60-62; X-Men: Spotlight on Starjammers #1-2; material from Fantastic Four Annual #23; New Mutants Annual #6-7; X-Factor Annual #5-6; New Warriors Annual #1, Marvel Comics Presents #10-17, #24-32, #41, #43 and #48-49; Marvel Super Heroes (vol. 2) #2 and #6-8; Marvel Holiday Special (1991) #1; and Marvel Tales #262 | 984 | October 2024 | 978-1302960117 |
X-Men by Chris Claremont and Jim Lee Omnibus Vol. 2 | Uncanny X-Men #273–280; X-Factor #63–70; X-Men (vol. 2) #1–9 and material from 10 to 11; Ghost Rider (vol. 2) #26–27 | 832 | January 2012 | 978-0785159056 |
March 2021 | 978-1302927141 | |||
X-Men: Age of Apocalypse Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #320–321, X-Men (vol. 2) #40–41, Cable #20, X-Men Alpha, Amazing X-Men #1–4, Astonishing X-Men (vol. 2) #1–4, Factor X #1–4, Gambit & the X-Ternals #1–4, Generation Next #1–4, Weapon X #1–4, X-Calibre #1–4, X-Man #1–4, X-Men Omega, Age of Apocalypse: The Chosen and X-Men: Age of Apocalypse Ashcan Edition | 1072 | March 2012 | 978-0785159827 |
June 2021 | 978-1302930028 | |||
X-Men: Age of Apocalypse Companion Omnibus | X-Men Chronicles #1–2; X-Universe #1–2; Tales from the Age of Apocalypse #1–2; X-Man #53–54, -1, Annual '96; Blink #1–4; Exiles #60–61; X-Men: Age of Apocalypse one-shot and #1–6; What If? (vol. 2) #77, #81; What If? X-Men: Age of Apocalypse; material from Hulk: Broken Worlds #2; X-Men Prime; X-Men: Endangered Species; Exiles: Days of Then & Now; Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Age of Apocalypse 2005 | 992 | April 2014 | 978-0785185147 |
July 2021 | 978-1302930004 | |||
X-Men Road To Onslaught Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #322-328, Annual '95; X-Men Prime #1, X-Men #42-47, X-Men Annual '95, X-Men Unlimited #8-9, Sabretooth Special #1, Wolverine/Gambit: Victims #1-4, Starjammers #1-4 | 912 | December 3, 2024 | 9781302959500 |
X-Men/Avengers: Onslaught Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #333-337; X-Force #55, #57-58; Cable #32-36; X-Man #15-19; X-Men (vol. 2) #53-57, Annual '96; X-Men Unlimited #11; Onslaught: X-Men, Onslaught: Marvel Universe, Onslaught: Epilogue; Avengers #401-402; Fantastic Four #415; Incredible Hulk (vol. 2) #444-445; Wolverine (vol. 2) #104-105; X-Factor #125-126; Amazing Spider-Man #415; Green Goblin #12; Spider-Man #72; Iron Man #332; Punisher #11; Thor #502; X-Men: Road to Onslaught #1; material from Excalibur #100 and Fantastic Four #416 | 1296 | July 2015 | 978-0785192626 |
January 2022 | 978-1302931612 | |||
X-Men: Onslaught Aftermath Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #338-350, -1, Annual '96-'97, X-men #58-64, -1, X-Men Annual '97, X-Men Unlimited #12-15, Magneto #1-4, XSE #1-4, X-Factor #130, Juggernaut #1, Beast #1-3, Psylocke & Archangel: Crimson Dawn #1-4, Gambit #1-4, material from Marvel Holiday Special #1; Marvel Valentine Special #1 | 1448 | June 24, 2025 | 9781302964191 |
X-Men vs. Apocalypse: The Twelve Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #371-380 and Annual '99; X-Men (vol. 2) #91-99 and Annual '99 (#94, A-story only); X-Men Unlimited #24-26 (#24, A-story only); Astonishing X-Men (vol. 2) #1-3; Wolverine (vol. 2) #145–149; Gambit #8-9; Cable #71-78; X-Man #59-60; X-51 #8; X-Force #101; X-Men Yearbook 1999 | 1280 | February 2020 | 978-1302922870 |
X-Men: Revolution by Chris Claremont Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #381-389; X-Men (vol. 2) #100-109 and Annual 2000; X-Men Unlimited #27-29; X-Men: Black Sun #1-5; Bishop: The Last X-Man #15-16; Cable #87 | 904 | August 2018 | 978-1302912147 |
War of Kings Omnibus | Uncanny X-Men #475-486, X-Men: Emperor Vulcan #1-5, Secret Invasion: War of Kings, X-Men: Kingbreaker #1-4, War of Kings: Darkhawk #1-2, War of Kings: Warriors #1-2, War of Kings #1-6, War of Kings: Ascension #1-4, War of Kings: Savage World of Sakaar, Nova #23-28, Guardians of the Galaxy #13-19, War of Kings: Who Will Rule?, Marvel Spotlight: War of Kings | 1304 | November 2016 | 978-1302902254 |
Avengers vs X-Men Omnibus | Avengers vs. X-Men (2012) #0-12; Point One (2011) #1 (AVX story); AVX: Vs. (2012) #1-6; Avengers vs. X-Men: Infinite (2012) #1, 6, 10; Avengers Academy (2010) #29-33; Secret Avengers (2010) #26-28; Avengers (2010) #25-30; New Avengers (2010) #24-30; X-Men Legacy (2008) #266-270; Wolverine & the X-Men (2011) #9-16, 18; AVX: Consequences (2012) #1-5; Uncanny X-Men (2011) #11-20; A-Babies vs. X-Babies (2012) #1 | 1680 | July 2022 | 978-1302946777 |
X-Men: The Hidden Years Omnibus | X-Men: The Hidden Years #1-22, Fantastic Four #102-104, material from X-Men #94 and Amazing Adult Fantasy #14 | 2023 |
In other media
[edit]- The title card of The Super Hero Squad Show episode "Hexed, Vexed and Perplexed!" is an homage to X-Men #1.[citation needed]
- During a montage in the 2024 Marvel Cinematic Universe film Deadpool & Wolverine, Wade Wilson encounters a variant of Wolverine nailed to an X, a reference to the cover art of issue #251.[80]
References
[edit]- ^ Daniels, Les (1991). "The Marvel Age (1961–1970)". Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics. New York, New York: Harry N. Abrams. p. 111. ISBN 9780810938212.
The X-Men, a comic book series featuring a very different sort of superhero group, made its debut simultaneously with The Avengers in September 1963.
- ^ The X-Men at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ DeFalco, Tom; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2008). "1960s". Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 94. ISBN 978-0756641238.
The X-Men #1 introduced the world to Professor Charles Xavier and his teenage students Scott Summers/Cyclops, Hank McCoy/Beast, Warren Worthington/Angel, Robert "Bobby" Drake/Iceman, and Jean Grey/Marvel Girl. Erik Magnus Lehnsherr/Magneto, the master of magnetism and leader of the Brotherhood of Mutants also appeared.
{{cite book}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Tucker, Reed (2017). Slugfest: Inside the Epic 50-Year Battle Between Marvel and DC. Da Capo Press. p. 31.
- ^ DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 99: "Stan Lee and Jack Kirby decided to try their hands at a pair of reluctant super villains when they created the Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver in The X-Men #4."
- ^ DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 107: "Originally created for pulp magazines, and then used in Marvel Comics #1 (Oct. 1939), Ka-Zar the Great was brought up by tigers...When Stan Lee and Jack Kirby revived the character, they also paid homage to...[Edgar Rice] Burroughs' ideas: The dinosaur-filled Savage Land is based on Burroughs' Savage Pellucidar."
- ^ DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 120: "Writer Roy Thomas wanted to introduce mutants from other countries into the X-Men. His first attempt was Banshee...Drawn by Werner Roth, Banshee was a former Irish Interpol agent who eventually joined the X-Men."
- ^ a b c d e DeFalco, Tom (May 2006). Comics Creators on X-Men. London, United Kingdom: Titan Books. ISBN 978-1-84576-173-8.
- ^ Friedrich, Gary (w), Heck, Don; Roth, Werner (p), Tartaglione, John (i). "When Mutants Clash!" The X-Men, no. 45 (June 1968).
- ^ Thomas, Roy (w), Buscema, John (p), Tuska, George (i). "In Battle Joined!" The Avengers, no. 53 (June 1968).
- ^ DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 132: "Lorna Dane's green hair marked her as a mutant...in The X-Men #49, an issue written by Arnold Drake and illustrated by Don Heck and Werner Roth."
- ^ DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 135: "Alex [Summers] was the younger brother of the X-Man Scott 'Cyclops' Summers. He appeared in The X-Men #54, by writer Arnold Drake and artist Don Heck."
- ^ Schumer, Arlen (Winter 1999). "Neal Adams: The Marvel Years". Comic Book Artist (3). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. Archived from the original on April 22, 2014. Retrieved May 12, 2013.
- ^ Sanderson, Peter "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 145: "Writer Dennis O'Neil revealed that it was not Xavier who had perished but a shape-shifter called the Changeling...This epic tale provided an appropriately grand finale for the work of legendary artist Neal Adams."
- ^ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 145: "[X-Men #66] would be the series' last issue by writer Roy Thomas and artist Sal Buscema."
- ^ X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
- ^ Ka-Zar #2, December 1970
Ka-Zar #3, March 1971
Marvel Tales #30, April 1971
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 3: The Sentinels Live - ^ Amazing Spider-Man #92, January 1971
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Amazing Spider-Man, Vol. 6: The Death of Captain Stacy - ^ Marvel Team-Up #23, July 1974
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn - ^ Amazing Adventures #11, March 1972
Amazing Adventures #12, May 1972
Amazing Adventures #15, November 1972
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn - ^ Incredible Hulk #161, March 1973
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Incredible Hulk Epic Collection, Vol. 6: Crisis on Counter-Earth - ^ Incredible Hulk #150, April 1972
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Incredible Hulk Epic Collection, Vol. 5: Who Will Judge the Hulk? - ^ Marvel Team-Up #4, September 1972
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Morbius the Living Vampire Epic Collection, Vol. 1: The Living Vampire - ^ Adventure into Fear #20, February 1974
Morbius the Living Vampire Epic Collection, Vol. 1: The Living Vampire - ^ The Avengers #110-111, April–May 1973
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Avengers Epic Collection, Vol. 6: A Traitor Stalks Among Us - ^ Incredible Hulk #172, February 1974
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Incredible Hulk Epic Collection, Vol. 6: Crisis on Counter-Earth - ^ Captain America #172–175, April–July 1974
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Captain America Epic Collection, Vol. 5: The Secret Empire - ^ The Avengers #88, May 1971
Avengers Epic Collection, Vol. 5: This Beachhead Earth
Incredible Hulk Epic Collection, Vol. 5: Who Will Judge the Hulk?
- ^ Shanna the She-Devil #5, August 1973
- ^ The Defenders #15-16, September–October 1974
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
The Defenders Epic Collection, Vol. 2: Enter: The Headmen - ^ Giant-Size Fantastic Four #4, February 1975
X-Men Epic Collection, Vol. 4: It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
Fantastic Four Epic Collection, Vol. 9: The Crusader Syndrome - ^ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 169: "[Editor Roy] Thomas realized that if X-Men was to be successfully revived, it needed an exciting new concept. Thomas came up with just such an idea: the X-Men would become an international team, with members from other countries as well as the United States. Writer Len Wein and artist Dave Cockrum were assigned to the new project and the result was Giant-Size X-Men #1."
- ^ a b Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 171
- ^ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 176: "Writer Chris Claremont and artist Dave Cockrum's intent in transforming Jean Grey into Phoenix was to boost Jean's powers to a higher level"
- ^ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 181: "When 'new' X-Men co-creator Dave Cockrum left the series, John Byrne took over as penciler and co-plotter. In his first issue, Byrne and writer Chris Claremont wound up the Shi'ar story arc."
- ^ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 189
- ^ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 190
- ^ Sacks, Jason (September 6, 2010). "Top 10 1970s Marvels". Comics Bulletin. Archived from the original on August 1, 2013. Retrieved August 3, 2013.
- ^ Daniels "The Marvel Universe (1978–1990)", p. 186: "The controversial story created a sensation and The X-Men became the comic book to watch."
- ^ Thomas, Roy; Sanderson, Peter (2007). The Marvel Vault: A Museum-in-a-Book with Rare Collectibles from the World of Marvel. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Running Press. p. 136. ISBN 978-0762428441.
- ^ DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 196: "In January [1980] a nine-part story began that changed the X-Men forever...Claremont proposed a story that would show how Jean Grey – one of the original members of the X-Men – had become corrupted by her new Phoenix power.
- ^ DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 200
- ^ Cooke, Jon B.; Nolen-Weathington, Eric (2006). Modern Masters, Vol. 7: John Byrne. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 31–32. ISBN 978-1893905566.
I came up with a Sentinels story where the Sentinels had taken over the world and killed everybody. That's about as tough as you get right?
- ^ Thomas and Sanderson, p. 137: "The Uncanny X-Men remained something of a cult book, with a small but devoted following, but as the 1980s continued, sales went up and up. By mid-decade, it was consistently the top-selling comic book not simply at Marvel but in the entire American comics industry."
- ^ DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 218: "A brilliant weapons inventor Forge was the man the government hired when Tony Stark stopped building munitions."
- ^ Khoury, George; Nolen-Weathington, Eric (2006). Modern Masters, Vol. 6: Arthur Adams. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 28. ISBN 978-1893905542.
- ^ DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 228: "The Mutant Massacre was an eleven-issue story that ran from October 1986...Working for Mister Sinister the Marauders – a team of mutant mercenaries – raided the Alley and callously slaughtered most of the Morlocks."
- ^ DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 236: "'The Fall of the Mutants' was actually three separate stories – one in each of the X-Men titles."
- ^ Cronin, Brian (October 18, 2013). "Comic Book Legends Revealed #441". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on August 21, 2014.
Longtime X-Men fans might recall how Chris Claremont used real-life National Public Radio personalities Neal Conan and Manoli Wetherell in X-Men comics.
- ^ Manning, Matthew K. "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 249: "[Storm] encountered one of the most popular X-Men of the 1990s the enigmatic thief called Gambit. Created by legendary X-scribe Chris Claremont and artist Michael Collins, Gambit's Southern charm, thick Cajun accent, and ability to supercharge objects with kinestic energy for explosive results won over the readers."
- ^ Manning "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 251: "With a marketplace primed for flashy event-orientated stories, the X-Men titles took full advantage with their epic crossover, 'X-Tinction Agenda'."
- ^ Manning "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 255: "X-Men #1 [was] the best selling comic book in the history of the medium, selling well over eight million copies."
- ^ a b c d Sjoerdsman, Al; Vandal, Stuart; York, Jeph (December 2010). Official Index to the Marvel Universe: The Uncanny X-Men. Marvel Comics. ISBN 978-0-7851-4958-3.
- ^ Manning "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 255: "Created by writer John Byrne and artist Whilce Portacio, Bishop found himself traveling back in time to the 20th century and coming face to face with the X-Men."
- ^ Manning "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 261: "The 'X-Cutioner's Song' [was] an epic twelve-part crossover showcasing the various X-teams' battle with the Cable-clone Stryfe."
- ^ Manning "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 272: "The 'Age of Apocalypse' was a major crossover event that drastically changed the landscape of the universe that the X-Men existed in."
- ^ Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 306: "Renaming the X-Men comic New X-Men, Morrison ignored the convoluted plot threads that had seemed to plague the X-family of books for years, and instead focused on the original idea of a mutant school."
- ^ Callahan, Timothy (July 21, 2008). "Review: Uncanny X-Men #500". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on May 22, 2014.
- ^ Callahan, Timothy (May 19, 2009). "Review: Uncanny X-Men #510". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on November 7, 2012.
- ^ Schedeen, Jesse (December 16, 2009). "X-Men: Magneto's Utopia". IGN. Archived from the original on May 22, 2014.
- ^ Pepose, David (April 29, 2010). "Dial H for History: Nightcrawler, Conscience of the X-Men". Newsarama. Archived from the original on May 22, 2014.
- ^ Ekstrom, Steve (February 25, 2010). "Revelation X: Matt Fraction Talks Uncanny & Second Coming". Newsarama. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013.
- ^ Ching, Albert (September 23, 2010). "Fraction and Gillen on Their Uncanny X-Men Team-Up". Newsarama. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013.
- ^ Ching, Albert (January 24, 2011). "Fraction and Gillen Explain It All (Thor, Journey, X-Men)". Newsarama. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013.
- ^ Mase, Poet (October 19, 2011). "Uncanny X-Men #544 Review". IGN. Archived from the original on May 22, 2014.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men vol. 2 at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ Sunu, Steve (October 23, 2012). "X-Position: Gillen Wraps Uncanny X-Men". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on June 21, 2013.
- ^ Gillen, Kieron (October 17, 2012). "Many Comics Available for Purchase". Archived from the original on May 27, 2013.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men vol. 3 at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ White, Brett (August 1, 2012). "Marvel NOW! Q&A: All-New X-Men". Marvel Comics. Archived from the original on May 11, 2013. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
- ^ Sunu, Steve (November 8, 2012). "Bachalo Confirms Uncanny X-Men Relaunch". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on December 13, 2012. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
- ^ X-Men: Battle of the Atom
- ^ a b "Uncanny X-Men & X-Men SDCC Panel". ComicsBlend.com. n.d. Archived from the original on September 20, 2015. Retrieved July 12, 2015.
- ^ Marston, George (August 10, 2018). "UNCANNY X-MEN #1 Will 'DISASSEMBLE' This November". Newsarama.
- ^ "MARVEL to Cancel, Relaunch Entire X-MEN Line". Newsarama.
- ^ X-Men Annual at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ The Uncanny X-Men Annual at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ Uncanny X-Men Annual vol. 2 at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ The Uncanny X-Men at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ Purslow, Matt (July 12, 2024). "Deadpool & Wolverine: 30 Spoiler-Filled Details From the First 35 Minutes". IGN. Retrieved July 30, 2024.
External links
[edit]- Uncanny X-Men at Marvel.com
- Uncanny X-Men at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Uncanny X-Men at the Marvel Database
- Uncanny X-Men at the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators
- 1963 comics debuts
- Comics characters introduced in 1963
- Superhero comics
- X-Men titles
- American comics characters
- Comics by Arnold Drake
- Comics by Brian Michael Bendis
- Comics by Chris Claremont
- Comics by Ed Brubaker
- Comics by Jack Kirby
- Comics by Jim Lee
- Comics by John Byrne (comics)
- Comics by Len Wein
- Comics by Matt Fraction
- Comics by Neal Adams
- Comics by Roy Thomas
- Comics by Stan Lee
- Comics by Kelly Thompson
- Comics by Cullen Bunn