Fall of the House of X Reveals Marvel’s Biggest Threat – And It Isn’t Orchis

Since their assault on the Hellfire Gala, Orchis has experienced what might be the most meteoric rise to power of any villainous organization to ever grace the Marvel Universe. Not only have they subjugated almost all of mutantkind, but Orchis has also instilled themselves as an independent global superpower on a scale that few if any have achieved before them. Unfortunately, Orchis’ latest crowning achievement in their war against mutants has brought about the question of what comes next, and the most powerful villains on Earth are about to find out that there is no possible answer that works out well for them.Leading up to the obviously and overtly biased trial against Scott Summers, aka Cyclops, Fall of the House of X #1 (by Gerry Duggan, Lucas Werneck, Bryan Valenza, Tom Muller, Jay Bowen, and VC’s Travis Lanham) sees the mutant leader interrogated by the progenitor of Orchis herself, Doctor Alia Gergor, and another of the organization’s leaders, Karima Shapandar, better known as the Omega Sentinel. While Doctor Gregor is more than happy to gloat about Orchis’ impending victory, Cyclops is also glad to share his own insight into things to come. Or rather, to remind Doctor Gregor that she doesn’t actually have any idea what comes after Orchis have celebrated their victorious day in court. Omega Sentinel and the rest of Orchis’ mechanized leaders, on the other hand, seem to know exactly what comes next for Orchis, and all signs point toward them ushering in the next era of technological terror akin to what the X-Men have already seen in the Phalanx.When the Phalanx made their Marvel Comics debut in the pages of 1993’s X-Men #305 (by Scott Lobdell, Jan Duursema, Jose Marzan Jr., and Joe Rosas), they were an unnamed and enigmatic new set of enemies for the eponymous heroes to both investigate and dismantle. Originally believed to have been created by the same Technarchy from which the New Mutants’ very own Warlock hails, the Phalanx were eventually discovered to have created the Technarchy for their own purposes instead. As an ancient species with a long history of conquest, the Phalanx have posed a formidable threat to the X-Men and the Marvel Universe at large on numerous occasions. In fact, the Phalanx as a whole has arguably posed the largest threat of any technologically based opponents that the X-Men have faced. Fortunately, the heroes have never had an issue fending off any attempted attacks on Earth that the Phalanx have launched. That being said, the numerous lives of Moira MacTaggert have proven just how disastrous future encounters with the Phalanx are sure to be, assuming Orchis’ Sentinels don’t wipe out all of humanity and mutantkind before then.

Since their assault on the Hellfire Gala, Orchis has experienced what might be the most meteoric rise to power of any villainous organization to ever grace the Marvel Universe. Not only have they subjugated almost all of mutantkind, but Orchis has also instilled themselves as an independent global superpower on a scale that few if any have achieved before them. Unfortunately, Orchis’ latest crowning achievement in their war against mutants has brought about the question of what comes next, and the most powerful villains on Earth are about to find out that there is no possible answer that works out well for them.

Leading up to the obviously and overtly biased trial against Scott Summers, aka Cyclops, Fall of the House of X #1 (by Gerry Duggan, Lucas Werneck, Bryan Valenza, Tom Muller, Jay Bowen, and VC’s Travis Lanham) sees the mutant leader interrogated by the progenitor of Orchis herself, Doctor Alia Gergor, and another of the organization’s leaders, Karima Shapandar, better known as the Omega Sentinel. While Doctor Gregor is more than happy to gloat about Orchis’ impending victory, Cyclops is also glad to share his own insight into things to come. Or rather, to remind Doctor Gregor that she doesn’t actually have any idea what comes after Orchis have celebrated their victorious day in court. Omega Sentinel and the rest of Orchis’ mechanized leaders, on the other hand, seem to know exactly what comes next for Orchis, and all signs point toward them ushering in the next era of technological terror akin to what the X-Men have already seen in the Phalanx.

When the Phalanx made their Marvel Comics debut in the pages of 1993’s X-Men #305 (by Scott Lobdell, Jan Duursema, Jose Marzan Jr., and Joe Rosas), they were an unnamed and enigmatic new set of enemies for the eponymous heroes to both investigate and dismantle. Originally believed to have been created by the same Technarchy from which the New Mutants’ very own Warlock hails, the Phalanx were eventually discovered to have created the Technarchy for their own purposes instead. As an ancient species with a long history of conquest, the Phalanx have posed a formidable threat to the X-Men and the Marvel Universe at large on numerous occasions. In fact, the Phalanx as a whole has arguably posed the largest threat of any technologically based opponents that the X-Men have faced. Fortunately, the heroes have never had an issue fending off any attempted attacks on Earth that the Phalanx have launched. That being said, the numerous lives of Moira MacTaggert have proven just how disastrous future encounters with the Phalanx are sure to be, assuming Orchis’ Sentinels don’t wipe out all of humanity and mutantkind before then.

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