Orchis, led by Dr. Stasis and M.O.D.O.K., have created a formidable new ally to aid them in wiping mutantkind and Krakoa out of existence. Determined to balance the needs of humanity and mutantkind, the Avengers and the X-Men of Earth have banded together to form their own alliance: The Uncanny Avengers.With the Fall of X well underway, chaos reigns as the Krakoan mutants deal with their exile on Earth as the Stark Sentinels hunt them, and Captain Krakoa attacks the US government, the Unity Squad — Captain America, Rogue, Deadpool, Quicksilver, Penance, and Psylocke — have a tenuous situation on their hands. Written by Gerry Duggan, with extra writing from Jonathan Hickman, art by Javier Garrón, colors by Morry Hollowell, and letters by VC’s Travis Lanham, Uncanny Avengers #1 features the most rag-tag team Marvel has ever had dealing with a large-scale crisis.While the Judgement Day arc of 2022 was nothing short of apocalyptic with its widespread destruction and cosmic horror elements, there is something especially dark and unsettling about the smaller-scale grounded violence of the Fall of X. With false flags, prejudice, and mass-hysteria, Uncanny Avengers #1 is just a hop, skip, and jump away from overt social commentary, thinly veiled behind a veneer of Marvel sheen. Thankfully, the violence and chaos are just fantastical enough to keep it from being too close for comfort, and the story offers plenty of hope and laughs to keep fans entertained.RELATED: Immortal X-Men Editor Reveals More Details About Fall of X
Orchis, led by Dr. Stasis and M.O.D.O.K., have created a formidable new ally to aid them in wiping mutantkind and Krakoa out of existence. Determined to balance the needs of humanity and mutantkind, the Avengers and the X-Men of Earth have banded together to form their own alliance: The Uncanny Avengers.
With the Fall of X well underway, chaos reigns as the Krakoan mutants deal with their exile on Earth as the Stark Sentinels hunt them, and Captain Krakoa attacks the US government, the Unity Squad — Captain America, Rogue, Deadpool, Quicksilver, Penance, and Psylocke — have a tenuous situation on their hands. Written by Gerry Duggan, with extra writing from Jonathan Hickman, art by Javier Garrón, colors by Morry Hollowell, and letters by VC’s Travis Lanham, Uncanny Avengers #1 features the most rag-tag team Marvel has ever had dealing with a large-scale crisis.
While the Judgement Day arc of 2022 was nothing short of apocalyptic with its widespread destruction and cosmic horror elements, there is something especially dark and unsettling about the smaller-scale grounded violence of the Fall of X. With false flags, prejudice, and mass-hysteria, Uncanny Avengers #1 is just a hop, skip, and jump away from overt social commentary, thinly veiled behind a veneer of Marvel sheen. Thankfully, the violence and chaos are just fantastical enough to keep it from being too close for comfort, and the story offers plenty of hope and laughs to keep fans entertained.
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