The X-Axis – 25 March 2026
UNCANNY X-MEN #25. (Annotations here.) This is the final part of “Where Monsters Dwell” and… um. Look, I like this book, and I like the creators, and I like the Outliers, but this arc is a misfire. To be fair, part of my problem with it is that the premise is pretty much that the Legion of Monsters are cool, and therefore a story where the X-Men fight the Legion of Monsters will be cool. And I disagree – I think the Legion of Monsters are boring and there’s really nothing here to change my mind. After all, they spend practically the whole arc hypnotised, so they’re not even really functional characters in it. But there are other problems too. The western strand seems to be implying that there’s more to Marcus than he lets on, but it doesn’t pay off coherently – the Rawhide Kid stuff falls away entirely and it winds up as just a pep talk to encourage the Outliers to be heroes. And issue #25 feels like it’s far, far too deep into the series for them to be learning that – doesn’t Ransom already want to be an X-Man? Some of the Gambit addiction subplot lands, and most of the issue is drawn by David Marquez, so it’s obviously going to look good, but mostly this feels like a forced attempt to shoehorn in some characters that the creators find a lot more interesting than I do.
INGLORIOUS X-FORCE #3. (Annotations here.) You certainly can’t accuse this book of dragging out its main storyline. The basic plot is that Cable has gathered this team together supposedly in order to protect Ms Marvel, but mainly in order to find out which of the team goes on to kill her in an alternate future. He only has three suspects, and by the end of issue #3 we’ve already eliminated two of them. We’ve already down Hellverine, and now this is Boom-Boom’s story. It’s partly a homage to Nextwave, but with part of the angle being that Boom-Boom doesn’t remember it fondly at all. After all, once you start incorporating Nextwave into the regular Marvel Universe, you run into the problem that it’s no longer a wacky comedy book in a wacky comedy world, but some sort of deranged collapse of rationality. Al Ewing did something similar with Spectrum’s reaction in Captain America and the Mighty Avengers, playing it as a sort of cosmic horror in which normal characters found themselves made into jokes, but doing it with Boom-Boom adds the fact that she’s the one you might expect to take it in her stride. To be honest, any attempt to get Nextwave elements to function in the regular Marvel Universe has problems – once you start grounding them in any sort of reality they kind of stop being funny, and this story feels like it’s trying to have its cake and eat it on that front. But Michael Sta. Maria’s art kind of pulls it off, and smooths over those competing elements. It kind of works, though I’m not sure how.
Generation X-23 #2 annotations
GENERATION X-23 #2
“A Numbers Game”
Writer: Jody Houser
Artist: Jacopo Camagni
Colour artist: Erick Arciniega
Letterer: Ariana Maher
Editor: Mark Basso
COVER: Wolverine (Laura) fights X-73, while the rest of the Generated watch.
WOLVERINE:
Laura can sense that it was used in the past for similar training sessions to the ones that she was put through. Having expected to find prisoners similar to herself, she’s puzzled by how relatively normal the Generated are, and struggles to understand why they haven’t simply left. She’s keen to recruit them into the mutant community.
SUPPORTING CAST:
Scout. She’s happy to play along with the Generated calling her a super hero, in a rather tongue in cheek way. Generally, she seems happy to meet these new Facility creations, and particularly keen to chat with X-99 (the girl near her age).
Inglorious X-Force #3 annotations
INGLORIOUS X-FORCE #3
“Field of Booms”
Writer: Tim Seeley
Artist: Michael Sta. Maria
Colour artist: Romulo Fajardo Jr
Letterer: Joe Caramanga
Editor: Mark Basso
COVER: Boom-Boom posing with Cable and Archangel behind her.
X-FORCE:
Boom-Boom. This is her spotlight issue, and it involves the Beyond Corporation, which brings back memories of her time in Nextwave. The continuity status of Nextwave is, shall we say, vexed. Originally it was meant to be an out-of-continuity comedy book, but then references to it started cropping up in mainstream Marvel Universe titles. The official line, per Captain America and the Mighty Avengers #6-7, is supposed to be that the Beyond Corporation was originally controlled by rogue cosmic entities who abducted the Nextwave characters to an alternate reality, altered their memories and personalities, and made them run around in comedy stories for a year just for the hell of it. This isn’t always strictly adhered to, and this story seems to treat it as having happened on the mainstream world. (The Beyond Corporation as it now exists is what was left behind once the rogue Beyonders themselves had been driven away.)
Uncanny X-Men #25 annotations
UNCANNY X-MEN vol 6 #25
“Where Monsters Dwell, part 3”
Writer: Gail Simone
Artists: David Marquez & Luciano Vecchio
Colour artist: Matthew Wilson
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Editor: Tom Brevoort
COVER: Wolverine fights Werewolf By Night.
This issue has legacy number #725, which is presumably why it gets a five-page back-up strip on top of the usual story.
THE X-MEN:
Gambit. Sadurang shows up in the middle of the fight to declare that a year has passed since they made their deal over the Left Eye of Agamotto, and to reclaim the Eye as bargained. Gambit acknowledges feeling addicted to the Eye (as shown in the intervention sequence in issue #23), and having an addictive personality generally, but rejects the Eye on the grounds that he has other reasons to live for. Unfortunately, the Eye refuses to be returned. The art is ambiguous about this, but Gambit’s closing dialogue seems to make it clear that he’s still stuck with the Eye, although newly determined to resist its temptations.
Rogue, Nightcrawler, Jubilee and Wolverine (along with Gambit) free the Legion of Monsters and then show up at Haven House to finish off Lady Darkhold. Wolverine’s transformation into a werewolf is simply cured by his healing factor between scenes. Curiously, Rogue changes costume from yellow-and-green to red-and-black in the final scene – I think this is supposed to be a side effect of her using her power to absorb Lady Darkhold, though it’s unusual for her costume to be affected.
Daredevil Villains #76: The Caviar Killer
DAREDEVIL #242 (May 1987)
“Caviar Killer”
Writer: Ann Nocenti
Penciller: Keith Pollard
Inker: Danny Bulanadi
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colourist: Max Scheele
Editor: Ralph Macchio
To be honest, the Caviar Killer is a pretty marginal inclusion in this feature. He’s a serial killer who appears in one story.
But Ann Nocenti’s run opens with Daredevil taking on a string of one-off characters (plus one guest), all of whom are mentally ill in one way or another, and most of whom are homicidal – Jack Hazzard, Sabretooth, Rotgut and the Trixter. The Caviar Killer completes the set before we move on to something else. And this issue is something of a turning point, since the real focus of the story isn’t on the Killer at all, and it’s also the first time that Nocenti starts to branch out beyond Hell’s Kitchen again. This story involves rich people – and, as a result, class conflict.
The opening scene isn’t subtle. Joe, who seems to be some sort of union representative, shows up at the home of the rich man who owns the chemical plant we works. The man lets him in, and gives him a complacent lecture about ambition and trickle-down economics while eating his one-man banquet. He’s massively unsympathetic and condescending, but evidently considers himself to be eminently reasonable. He claims to have worked his way up from poverty himself (and nobody ever tells us otherwise), and seems to genuinely believe that anyone else could do the same. When the man brushes off his pet dog breaking a “pre-Columbian burial urn” and starts feeding it steak, Joe snaps. He yells a bit about the distribution of wealth, then assaults the plant owner and starts shoving caviar down his throat. Somehow or other, this proves fatal – presumably it’s meant to be a heart attack.
Charts – 20 March 2026
The thing about Harry Styles is that he does have fanbase sales. So while he still has three tracks in the top 20 – at numbers 3, 5 and 15 – he doesn’t get a second week at number 1 with “American Girls”.
1. Sam Fender & Olivia Dean – “Rein Me In”
Yes, this again. It’s a fourth non-consecutive week at number 1, but for the first time there’s no asterisk attached – it would have beaten Olivia Dean’s “Man I Need” even if rthat track wasn’t subject to downweighting. This one isn’t because, inexplicably, it continues to grow (however slowly) after 40 weeks on sale.
We’re still in the unhappy position of having a top ten where five of the tracks feature either Olivia Dean or Harry Styles. However, “Rein Me In” has a very small lead over Bella Kay’s “iloveitiloveitiloveit” at number 2, so it probably won’t stay on top much longer.
11. Sienna Spiro – “The Visitor”
We really are in an era of minimalist music videos, aren’t we? But you have to wonder where the return on investment is, in doing anything more than this. This is the fourth single from her upcoming album, and she still has “Die on This Hill” on the chart at number 29. (more…)
The X-Axis – 18 March 2026
X-MEN #27. (Annotations here.) Part 2 of “Danger Room” is an issue devoted to introducing the members of Maxine Danger’s think tank – the X-Men themselves don’t get that much to do, since a lot of the issue is flashbacks setting up their back story and recruitment. They’re unusual villains to get so much time, since none of them actually has any particular interest in the X-Men or even in mutants in general – they’re just psychos who have been enlisted by Maxine Danger, who herself doesn’t actually have an obvious interest in the X-Men beyond charging for her services. I’m in two minds about this arc, right now – they all get a nice enough introduction, and Diaz’s art gives them a neat contrast with Maxine’s lunatic office manager. Colton and Jackson are rather similar characters, too, though I do like the other two being (likely) delusional killers who are convinced that they’re Skrulls trapped in human form. But as an X-Men story it does feel at the moment like we’re just chucking random stuff at the team for them to fight. Still, Jed MacKay gets the benefit of doubt that this is heading somewhere more than that, since it wouldn’t be his style.
CYCLOPS #2. By Alex Paknadel, Rogê Antônio, Fer Sifuentes-Sujo & Joe Caramagna. Well, this is fun. Sure, having Cyclops lose his visor and have to work around his uncontrollable powers is a well established routine, but it’s one we haven’t done in a good long while, and Paknadel and Antônio do it rather well. The plot may hinge on a massive coincidence of Cyclops stumbling upon the new Reavers’ scheme, but now that we’re here, we’ve got an escaped mutant who was never that keen on Krakoa and isn’t immediately in awe of Scott, which gives him someone to win over. Mostly, though, we’ve got the new Reavers squabbling among themselves as Donald Pierce tries to keep them all in line, and they’re turning out to be quite entertaining. We’re not dealing with professional soldiers any more, just wide-eyed cultists who’ve signed up for dubious cyborg conversion. They’ve got the equipment but they have no real idea what they’re doing, and Pierce seems to be making do with a bunch of underlings who have been powered up to the point where they can at least shove some non-combatants about. Paknadel gives him a sort of weary disdain that somehow feels a bit more developed to me than he has in a while. It’s a good take on the character.
X-Men #27 annotations
X-MEN vol 7 #27
“Danger Room, part 2”
Writer: Jed MacKay
Penciller: Netho Diaz
Inker: Sean Parsons
Colourist: Fer Sifuentes-Sujo
Letterer: Clayton Cowles
Editor: Tom Brevoort
COVER: Ben Liu, Animalia, Kid Omega and Temper react with shock as something with bloody hands approaches the Factory – it’s possibly meant to be Glob Herman staggering home, since nobody actually attacks the Factory in this issue.
THE X-MEN:
This is mostly an introducing-the-villains issue, so the X-Men themselves don’t actually do or say that much.
Cyclops, Juggernaut, Magik and the Beast are shown defiantly fighting Beyond’s techno-organic monsters.
Psylocke. We only see her in the Marauder as it comes under missile fire while she’s on her way to Greycrow. (Come to think of it, why didn’t she just get Magik to teleport her there before the mission?) According to Charlene Jackson (see below), the Danger Room’s “stated objective” in going after Psylocke was to separate her from the X-Men in order to weaken the team, by depriving them of her psychic abilities and her second-in-command role. Jackson and Maxine Danger both seem strongly inclined to see her dead anyway, which begs the question of why the stated objective was anything else – is it simply for plausible deniability, or does Frank Bohannon not actually want the X-Men dead? He didn’t spell out last issue what the Danger Room were meant to achieve, after all. See also the position with Glob Herman.
Daredevil Villains #75: The Trixter
DAREDEVIL #241 (April 1987)
“Black Christmas”
Writer: Ann Nocenti
Penciler: Todd McFarlane
Inker: Al Milgrom
Letterer: Joe Rosen
Colourist: Christie Scheele
Editor: Ralph Macchio
With Daredevil still lacking a regular artist, this issue features guest art from a pre-stardom Todd McFarlane. Not all that pre-stardom, mind you – he’d been working for Marvel and DC for a couple of years by this point, and his run on Incredible Hulk started the same month. He’s still not an obvious fit for an Ann Nocenti story. But this is fill-in work, so it’s quite conservative and largely in line with Marvel house style. (The generic cover art, which is by Mike Zeck and Klaus Janson, looks nothing like the interior.)
It’s Christmas Day in New York, and the Trixter is spending it alone in a 42nd Street hotel room. According to his monologue, he’s a world famous magician and master of disguise, whose real name is a secret. He implies that he doesn’t even remember his own real name, having spent so much of his life subsumed in his Trixter persona or his various disguises. He finds his life empty. He’s fascinated by Daredevil, who he regards as “a bit of a trickster, a stuntman” – but who chose to be a hero instead of an entertainer. So, apparently hoping to learn something, he decides to meet Daredevil and let him “decide my fate.” He seems to be contemplating suicide depending on how his meeting with Daredevil goes.
Charts – 13 March 2026
Harry Styles has an album out, and nobody else is going to take that on.
1. Harry Styles – “American Girls”
5. Harry Styles – “Ready, Steady, Go!”
Together with former number 1 “Aperture” (which rebounds to number 4), these are the maximum three tracks from the album “Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally”, which enters as his third number one album. (His second album, “Fine Line”, only got to number 2, but still spent over a year in the top 10.) If it wasn’t for the three-song rule, the entire album would have charted.
