Uncanny X-Force: Apocalypse Solution #1 – #4 + Uncanny X-Force: Deathlok Nation #5.1, #5 to #7Ĭollects: Cable And X-Force 1-5, Marvel Now! Point One (X-Force Story)Ĭable forms a new X-Force in Marvel NOW, with old favorites like Domino and new X-Men associates like Hope and Dr. Includes: New X-Men #32, X-Force #11, #21-25, New Mutants #6-8, X-Men: Legacy #231-234, X-Force/New Mutants: Necrosha One-Shot, X Necrosha: The Gathering Reading Order: X-Men: The Times and Life of Lucas Bishop #1-3, X-Men Messiah War One-Shot, Cable #13, X-Force #14, Cable #14, X-Force #15, Cable #15, X-Force #16 “The Legend Returns” by Rob Liefeld and Fabian Nicieza X-Force Doing the Jobs The X-Men Can’tĬollects: Messiah Complex event reading order.Ĭollects: X-Men: The Times And Life Of Lucas Bishop #1-3, Cable #11-15, X-Force #14-16, X-Force/Cable: Messiah War One-Shot Technically this continues the X-Force series, despite the vast differences in approach and eventual change where the comic was retitled X-Statix after issue #129.
Spiraling out of X-Tinction Agenda, Rob Liefeld and Fabian Nicieza grow Cable in to the action packed military strategist we’ve come to know today.Ĭollects: Uncanny X-Men #294-297, X-Factor (1986) #84-86, X-Men (1991) #14-16, X-Force (1991) #16-18 And Stryfe’s Strike File Support CBH on Patreon for exclusive rewards, or Donate here! Thank you for reading!īecome a Patron! X-Force 90’s Comic Book Reading OrderĬollects: New Mutants (1983) 98-100, Annual 7 X-Men Annual (1970) 15 X-Factor Annual 6 X-Force (1991) 1-15 Spider -Man (1990) 16 Cable: Blood & Metal 1-2 Material From New War – Riors Annual 1, X-Force Annual (1992) 1
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CBR reviews this weeks biggest comics, including Clear, Batman: The Imposter, Star Trek: The Mirror War, X-Force and Superman and the Authority. It’s intriguing, but it’s not enough to save an aggressively okay comic. Major Issues: X-Force Takes a Brutal Turn and Batman Finds an Imposter. X-Force #21 plays with the concept of telefloronics that Percy has been building up throughout his run. The coloring throughout the installment is top-notch in general, as usual with their work. GURU-eFX’s colors are the issue’s MVP, though, especially the ending stuff in the Washington forest the greens are so lush and beautiful. Gill’s art gets better as the issue goes on, with the action scene of X-Force fighting Man-Thing looking pretty great. Cassara does the first few pages, and they look great mutated monsters are a specialty of his, and his Man-Thing looks cool. There’s nothing spectacular but nothing amazing either.Ĭassara and Gill share art duties in this issue. Other than that, everything about the issue is perfectly fine. It’s not a stretch to think that readers don’t see everything that happens to X-Force, but something this important could have been foreshadowed earlier in the series, and it would have worked better.
That makes this whole plotline, as intriguing as it can be, feel like an afterthought. Percy layers his plots over multiple issues, so it’s weird that this issue starts with a flashback of something readers didn’t even know happened this seems like something Percy easily could have added in issues ago. However, other than all of that, this issue is pretty average.