Ultimate X-Men is a reimagination of the X-Men in the Ultimate Universe, by Peach Momoko. Starring Armor as the lead character, the comic has very few links to the classic X-Men characters and locations. Maystorm, another character from the series, was initially created as a variant cover for the X-Men comic.
Ultimate X-Men | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre |
|
Publication date | March 2024 |
Main character(s) | Ultimate X-Men |
Creative team | |
Created by | X-Men by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee |
Written by | Peach Momoko |
Artist(s) | Peach Momoko |
Letterer(s) | Vc Travis Lanham |
Editor(s) | Wilson Moss |
Editorial history
editUltimate X-Men by Peach Momoko is the third comic released in the Ultimate Universe line, alongside Ultimate Spider-Man and Ultimate Black Panther. It is a reimagination of the X-Men in general, and the Armor character in particular. The comic also introduces Maystorm, a character that Momoko designed for the variant cover of X-Men #27.[1] That cover was part of a larger project named "New Champions", which produced covers reflecting unexpected sidekicks of other superheroes as the recently created Spider-Boy; Maystorm was the first one to be used in an actual story, while the others would show up in the Spider-Woman comic.[2] Despite being an X-Men comic, the comic has very little in common with the usual products of the franchise. Momoko explained "My Ultimate X-Men isn't directly influenced by classic X-Men stories. I like to believe [Editor-in-Chief] C.B. [Beluski] and Jonathan Hickman chose me because they wanted something completely new and different, so I think sometimes no influences is a good thing".[3]
Plot
editHisako Ichiki attended Kirigaya Minami Middle School in Kirisaki City. She can manifest a psionic exoskeleton, a power that awakened in traumatic circumstances. Other students, such as Mei Igarashi and Nico Minoru, have powers as well. They find out that they are mutants, and that there is a cult of mutants, the Children of the Atom, who go after them.
Reception
editChase Magnett from Comicbook.com points that the comic has little relation with the broader narrative of the Ultimate Universe, the usual X-Men tropes, or even the superhero genre. He thinks that the comic aims to expand the franchise's genre boundaries.[4]
Shaun Corley from Screen Rant points that the comic skips almost all the key characters and elements of X-Men lore, such as the X-Mansion and Sentinels, and characters such as Professor X, Cyclops, Wolverine and Storm. He considers that, by doing so, Momoko focus instead on the core theme of the X-Men, that of people feeling lonely in a world that fears them.[5]
References
edit- ^ Cameron Bonomolo (January 23, 2024). "Ultimate X-Men Writer Teases "Something Completely New and Different"". Comic Book.com. Retrieved April 26, 2024.
- ^ Jonathan Jones (March 13, 2024). ""The New Champions": The Avengers' Sidekicks Are Entering Marvel Lore with a Shocking Hero Mentor". Screen Rant. Retrieved April 26, 2024.
- ^ Chris Hassan (January 22, 2024). "X-Men Monday #236 – Peach Momoko Talks 'Ultimate X-Men'". AIPT. Retrieved April 26, 2024.
- ^ Chase Magnett (March 6, 2024). "Ultimate X-Men #1 Review: A Brilliant New Tale of Horror and Fantasy (and Superheroes?)". ComicBook.com. Retrieved April 29, 2024.
- ^ Shaun Corley (March 7, 2024). "Ultimate X-Men #1 Is a Daring Reinvention That Makes the Franchise New Again (Review)". Screen Rant. Retrieved August 16, 2024.
External links
edit