• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Comic Book Herald

A Comic Book Reading Order Guide For Beginners & Fans

  • Reading Orders
    • Marvel
    • My Marvelous Year
    • DC Comics
    • All Comic Book Publishers
    • Most Recent
  • Beginner Guides
    • Beginner’s Guide To Comics In 2025
    • Marvel 2025: Where to Start?
    • DC 2025: Where to Start?
    • Best of Lists
    • Tablets for Comics
    • Guides for Digital Readers
  • Reviews
    • Marvel Comics
    • DC Comics
    • Comic Book Movies
    • Comic Book TV
    • Video Games
  • Podcasts & Video
    • My Marvelous Year
    • Best Comics Ever (CBH)
    • CBH on Youtube!
  • About Me
    • My Favorite Comics of All Time
    • Columns
    • CBH Email Newsletter
  • Support Comic Book Herald
    • Ways to support
You are here: Home / Featured / The Five Essential X-Men “Generation X” Comic Book Stories!

The Five Essential X-Men “Generation X” Comic Book Stories!

November 12, 2019 by Lincoln Crisler Leave a Comment

Generation X has a special place in the hearts of X-Fans of a certain age. If you were born in the 80s, you probably just missed reading New Mutants as the issues hit shelves (unless you were an especially precocious pre-teen), Shadowcat had already moved to Excalibur by the time you were old enough to read, and Jubilee wasn’t exactly a central character in X-Men plots.

I was twelve when the Phalanx Covenant kicked off what would be the first team of mostly-original mutants in nearly fifteen years, helmed by two Academy headmasters that hadn’t exactly enjoyed the spotlight. I’d been reading X-Men in sporadic chunks for a couple years, but already knew I wanted to see more of Banshee, and that having the White Queen working for Charles Xavier was going to cause issues.

Of course, no book is going to run seventy-five issues with no snags. New Mutants was written almost entirely by Chris Claremont and Louise Simonson, two of the best people to ever write X-Men comics, and even that title can’t lay claim perfection (Bird-Brain, anyone?). Nearly twenty years after Generation X’s final issue, I say the best way to tackle the title is chronologically, and perhaps skim through the less-enjoyable parts. Naturally, that’s assuming a level of dedication and availability of time not everyone has.

To that end, here are the top five essential arcs you should read, if you’re an X-Men fan and want to get into Generation X. If you need more incentive than that, consider how much panel-time many of these characters are getting, two decades down the road, in the Hickman-led Dawn of X titles! We’re going to take them chronologically:

Generation X #1 (1994)

Generation X 1-3, Third Genesis. Lobdell, Bachalo, Buckingham.

 

Support For Comic Book Herald:

Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a qualifying affiliate commission.

Comic Book Herald’s reading orders and guides are also made possible by My Marvelous Year club support on Patreon, and generous reader donations.

Any size contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Support CBH’s My Marvelous Year on Patreon for exclusive rewards, or Donate here! Thank you for reading!

Gets the band together and introduces the entire team and concept while also telling a story that lives up to months of hype in preceding issues. The interactions between Banshee and the White Queen, and among the students, along with the school’s outdoor Danger Room, the introduction of archvillain Emplate and the mystery of Penance all set a tone that, quite frankly, the entire back half of the run can’t live up to.

I can’t really explain how disappointed you’re going to be at how Penance/Monet are handled at a certain point, but the good news is—you can skip that! There’s nothing wrong with leaving big shoes to fill, however, and this first arc of the title does lead to a few years’ worth of really good comics.

Generation X 12-16, The Return of Emplate and Out of Synch. Lobdell, Grummett, Various.

It’s two arcs in one, but the last two issues proceed directly from the events of the first three. Emplate faces down with Generation X for the first time since the initial arc, and this time he has friends. We get a huge addition to the Emplate/Monet mythos. Jubilee has a big part in taking him down. Bishop guest stars. And we get a big look at Synch’s life before the team when they have to save him from himself.

Jubilee vs BastionGeneration X 27, The Last X-Man. Lobdell, Bachalo/Mhan, Vey/Hanna.

Narrowing down single issues of the book that stand apart from the rest is a tough task. There are arcs that stand out more; at least one that I’m ignoring in favor of this, actually. But one issue that does the trick by itself, without any support from what comes before or after? I’d be at a loss. Except for this one.

The team just had their face-off with Black Tom and Mondo, which didn’t make the list because it was just a little too neat; the aftermath, however, was still significant. Jubilee was spared because Bastion killed the Mondo-clone and, arguably, “rescued” her. Yeah, this is an “Operation: Zero Tolerance” lead-up. We see Bastion attempt to deconstruct Jubilee, thinking that she’s an easy way to the X-Men. And Jubilee gives us everything we’d want from her and more.
 
Generation X 55-56, Sins of the Past. Faerber, Dodson, Dodson.

Jay Faerber’s run is probably the best the book gets, after Lobdell of course, and inclusive of James Robinson’s short run. His run spans from #48-62 and is the portion of the series that is most reminiscent of the New Mutants. He quickly writes out Gaia, the last remnant of Larry Hama’s insanely bad Monet retcon storyline and introduces Emma’s older sister, Adrienne, as an additional headmaster/sometime antagonist. There’s legitimate school drama, involving our heroes and stemming from the inclusion of baseline human students at the Academy. He brings in Tom Corsi as supporting cast and writes some great material between Emma and Tom and Emma and Firestar, both of whom she has history with from her time with the Hellfire Club.

This particular two-issue storyline inserts Gen X into the events of Uncanny X-Men #281-282, wherein Trevor Fitzroy and some Sentinels attack the Hellfire Club, kill the Hellions and put the White Queen into the coma she doesn’t come out of until Uncanny #314.

Generation X # 71-74, Four Days. Wood, Pugh, Various.

I can’t explain why Faerber’s run didn’t rejuvenate the book’s sales to the editors’ satisfaction, but Warren Ellis was brought in after to kind of “show-run” the Counter-X relaunch of X-Man, X-Force and Generation X. After he plotted roughly five issues which Brian Wood scripted, Wood himself took over for a reasonably fitting road to #75, the book’s final issue.

Instead of one last big, inclusive arc, issues focus on specific members. Chamber has a day-date with an intriguing, deaf goth woman; Jubilee and M bond over the death of Synch by foiling a trainjacking, Banshee and Skin share a pint in a pub after Sean finds out about Moira’s death, and Husk spends the day overachieving while everyone else is out of the house. Wood tells a good story despite almost certainly knowing it was the book’s swan song (or perhaps, because of it).

Age of Apocalypse tie-in Generation NeXtHonorable Mention: Generation NeXt 1-4, Lobdell, Bachalo, Buckingham. 

The Age of Apocalypse, twenty-five years after publication, is a signature X-Men story. The thing is, what gives it most of its punch is turning what readers and fans already know about the X-Men, on its head. You know the X-Men; here they are led by Magneto. The Summers brothers? They’re here, too, but raised by Mister Sinister. You get the idea.

Doing that with characters we’ve barely gotten to know, and delivering possibly the most heart-wrenching subplot of an entire four-month, forty-issue event? Colossus and Shadowcat, as twisted as they are, give us the bit of familiarity we need to anchor the book, especially with Jubilee off with Gambit’s X-Ternals and Blink, part of the core X-Men team.

We get Chamber, Husk and Skin essentially on-model, but with some modifications. Mondo is used to far better effect than he ever is in the mainstream universe, and we even get a brand-new character, Vicente, who eventually surfaces in the 616 as a villain. As heartbreaking as the conclusion is, they do manage to meet Magneto’s objective, and Lobdell saves a bit more pain for X-Men Omega, the closing issue of the storyline.

Filed Under: Best of Lists, Featured Tagged With: X-Men

Heroically Support Comic Book Herald!

If you like Comic Book Herald, and are able to donate, any small contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Donate here! Or, support CBH on Patreon for exclusive rewards! Thank you for reading!

Become a Patron!

CBH Newsletter!

About Lincoln Crisler

Lincoln Crisler is a horror and science fiction novelist and editor, and a US Army combat veteran. He lives and works in Augusta, Georgia. Visit him online at http://lincolncrisler.info

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

The My Marvelous Year Podcast!

Apple PodcastsRSS

CBH Newsletter!

My Ultimate Year podcast and reading club

Recent Posts

  • 2010 pt. 10: The WORST Spider-Man Comics of All Time?! And FrankenCastle (again) May 19, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover E: Thunderbolts Review w/ Tiffany Babb May 12, 2025
  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 2 (2000) May 8, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 9: Thor: The Mighty Avenger, Bucky on Trial, & Invincible Iron Man May 5, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of April 2025 May 1, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover D: Dave Interviewed Donny Cates & Chris Claremont! And Daredevil: Born Again Review! April 27, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 8: Daredevil: Shadowland April 21, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 7: Wolverine, Second Coming, & Uncanny X-Force April 14, 2025
  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 1 (2000) April 7, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover C: Marvel Rivals Resurrects the X-Men’s Krakoa, Trivia & Jiggle Physics! April 7, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of March 2025 April 7, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 6: Hickman’s Fantastic Four: Three March 31, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 5: Realm of Kings & Thanos Imperative March 24, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover B: Daredevil Born Again (Again) TV Series Review! March 17, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 4: Amazing Spider-Man: Big Time & Dave’s Favorite Black Widow Story March 10, 2025

Popular Articles

DC Rebirth Guide

Batman Reading Order

DC New 52 Reading Order

Marvel Ultimate Universe Guide

Civil War Reading Order

Marvel Cosmic Reading Order

The Best Comics of All Time!

Deadpool Reading Order

Justice League Reading Order

Complete Thanos Reading Order

X-Men Reading Guide (Modern Era)

Age of Apocalypse Reading Order

Modern Marvel Universe in 25 Trades

Best Tablet For Digital Comics

Is Marvel Unlimited Worth It?

Footer

New to Comic Book Herald?

Hey there - my name's Dave and this is my comic book blog. It's my way of sharing my borderline obsessive addiction to the comic book medium, and I hope you like some of what's going on here.

Most people that come here are looking for my (WIP) Marvel reading order guide. You can probably also get a sense if CBH is for you by taking a look at some of my columns.

If you like what you see, let's connect on Facebook or Twitter. Or, leave a comment on the blog here, I'm always looking for new awesome people in the comic book community.

More on Comic Book Herald

  • Home
  • About
  • Support CBH
  • My Marvelous Year
  • Join!
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service

Recent Posts

  • 2010 pt. 10: The WORST Spider-Man Comics of All Time?! And FrankenCastle (again)
  • 2010 Variant Cover E: Thunderbolts Review w/ Tiffany Babb
  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 2 (2000)
  • 2010 Pt. 9: Thor: The Mighty Avenger, Bucky on Trial, & Invincible Iron Man
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of April 2025

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in