In 1988, Marvel Comics’ X-Men Universe combined to tell the Fall of the Mutants, a crossover event built around three major devastating separate events spanning the X-Men, X-Factor, and the New Mutants. Fall of the Mutants is the follow-up to Mutant Massacre, and part of the build to 1989’s Inferno, with some of the stranger and least discussed ideas and beats from the Chris Claremont era of X-Men.
Today I’ll answer:
- What are the themes of Fall of the Mutants and what impact do they have on the X-Men of today?
- As the first major Apocalypse story, what does Fall of the Mutants establish about the longtime X-villain?
- Will we see elements from this stranger era of late period Claremont resurface in modern X-men?
- Theories and predictions about what Fall of the Mutants means for the Dawn of X!
Spoilers for discussed comics may follow!
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[Read more…] about Krakin’ Krakoa #117: Fall of the Mutants Event Legacy!
Power Vacuum
So it was that with little fanfare, Claremont left the book to go back to X-Men full time.

The book feels fresh, unburdened by Xavier’s dream and “a world that hates and fears them.” Hell, at this point, almost half of Excalibur’s initial roster have never been X-Men. They’re not even mutants. Excalibur is also a small, five-person team that makes the book uncrowded, leaving plenty of room for character moments, Claremont’s hallmark rest issues, and of course, gags. 
But magic? Magic is anything goes. Where boundaries make most comics headlong and breathless, Excalibur gets away in a universe with seemingly no rules and no hurry to get them. If the X-Men suffer the sword of Damocles, then Excalibur is galavanting under an anvil.



















The Less Good
People kept leaving until X-Line Editor Bob Harras was scrambling for anyone to write the book. At that same moment, Scott Lobdell had just finished ruining
The loss of Claremont’s satiric buffoonery and the final move away from Davis’ arts tyle is the end of an era. The switch from Claremont’s magic to Lobdell’s mutant obsession means the book also loses its fantasy and absurdist elements.






I loved this whole series as a kid. Yes, even the Scott Lobdell travesty. I was young!
