REVIEW: Rise of the Powers of X #1 Is a Great Start to the End of the Krakoan Era

The final battle for Krakoa began with the release of Fall of the House of X #1. To mirror the Krakoan Era’s launch, Fall is accompanied by a sister series, Rise of the Powers of X. While Fall follows the mutants of today battling the forces of Orchis, Rise follows the last band of mutants fighting a battle for eternity outside of time and space. Rise of the Powers of X #1 sees Nimrod and Omega Sentinel put their final plan within a plan into motion, with only a few remaining X-Men standing in their way. Written by Kieron Gillen with art by R.B. Silva, colors by David Curiel, letters by VC’s Clayton Cowles, and design by Tom Muller and Jay Bowen, Rise of the Powers of X #1 is a spectacular issue that brings scale, stakes, and surprises.Rise starts having already assumed the answer to the battle that readers just began reading in Fall last week. It’s ten years after mutants returned to Earth to reclaim it from the grasp of Orchis. They failed. Now, Nimrod and Omega Sentinel are enacting their final plan while the X-Men attempt a last stand against them. Of course, Rise utilizes the same timeline structures and conceits established in Powers of X and continued through Sins of Sinister. This creates a story in which things are far from straightforward.This issue has a tremendous sense of scale. Taking readers to the past, future, and outside of time itself establishes the breadth of the battlefield. The scale doesn’t matter if there aren’t compelling stakes to match. This issue brings the necessary emotion. Heroes make sacrifices, and timelines are eradicated, but there’s always a feeling that every moment matters. There are also a handful of instantly iconic moments that have major implications for the future of mutantkind.

The final battle for Krakoa began with the release of Fall of the House of X #1. To mirror the Krakoan Era’s launch, Fall is accompanied by a sister series, Rise of the Powers of X. While Fall follows the mutants of today battling the forces of Orchis, Rise follows the last band of mutants fighting a battle for eternity outside of time and space. Rise of the Powers of X #1 sees Nimrod and Omega Sentinel put their final plan within a plan into motion, with only a few remaining X-Men standing in their way. Written by Kieron Gillen with art by R.B. Silva, colors by David Curiel, letters by VC’s Clayton Cowles, and design by Tom Muller and Jay Bowen, Rise of the Powers of X #1 is a spectacular issue that brings scale, stakes, and surprises.

Rise starts having already assumed the answer to the battle that readers just began reading in Fall last week. It’s ten years after mutants returned to Earth to reclaim it from the grasp of Orchis. They failed. Now, Nimrod and Omega Sentinel are enacting their final plan while the X-Men attempt a last stand against them. Of course, Rise utilizes the same timeline structures and conceits established in Powers of X and continued through Sins of Sinister. This creates a story in which things are far from straightforward.

This issue has a tremendous sense of scale. Taking readers to the past, future, and outside of time itself establishes the breadth of the battlefield. The scale doesn’t matter if there aren’t compelling stakes to match. This issue brings the necessary emotion. Heroes make sacrifices, and timelines are eradicated, but there’s always a feeling that every moment matters. There are also a handful of instantly iconic moments that have major implications for the future of mutantkind.

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