YMMV with their own pages.
- Accidental Aesop: Writers have generally treated the undue persecution given to mutants relative to other superpowered individuals as something of a plothole, with a number of explanations existing for why mutants in particular are seen as evil and not the Fantastic Four. However, an increasing number of fans have claimed that it actually provides one of the franchise's better morals on prejudice: that prejudice does not flow from consistent cause-and-effect, since it is by nature an immoral and illogical response. All throughout history, there have been cases of bigots that loved one group while hating another for completely arbitrary reasons.
- Accidental Innuendo: X-Men #35, which guest-starred Spider-Man, had Spider-Man fall in a stream while fighting the X-Men. Upon resurfacing, he declares, "Alright, you mutant misfits-- you've had it! One cataclysmic climax coming up-- in which a slightly soggy Spider-Man creams four X-Men!"
- Adaptation Displacement: Azazel and Toad have both been largely displaced by their respective film adaptations, both of which are generally preferred over their original incarnations. William Stryker is a curious example in that his original incarnation wasn't bad, and is still regarded well as a villain, but has still been overshadowed by his film incarnation thanks to the latter being one of the most recurring villains across all the films (only Magneto and Mystique have made more appearances).
- Adorkable:
- In Mojo: Black, we see an exiled Mojo crushing on a human woman called Ann, and striking up a sincere friendship with Glob, and he is so uncharacteristically shy and visibly out of his depth that it's surprisingly endearing.
- Nightcrawler's original characterization was this just through his wacky antics; later interpretations and adaptations often have him as a huge fan of one fandom or another—see Ultimate X-Men (2001).
- In one issue's Danger Room Cold Open, he and Rachel argue over what the best pirate film is.
- In Excalibur, he would flirt shamelessly with Meggan only to become embarrassed and befuddled if she turned the tables on him.
- Alas, Poor Scrappy: Turns out, the Phoenix Force wanted Teen Jean out of the way rather than wanting her as the latest host. To do so, the Phoenix kills Teen Jean so Adult Jean can claim it as the one true host. Many of her detractors, though they loved this twist, felt sorry for her.
- Alternative Character Interpretation:
- Apocalypse. Is he a one-note madman whose entire raison d'être boils down to hypocrisy (i.e. is willing to apply his The Social Darwinist ideologies to others but not himself) or is he a meticulously calculating Hidden Agenda Villain whose devotion to his diktat is so absolute as to accept his own death? Even within the same work his characterization can swing between these extremes Depending on the Writer, let alone his various adaptations and whatnot.
- Due to her long time lack of romantic connections to any character, many fans assumed Magik to be asexual, while others interpreted her friendship with Kitty as having Les Yay vibes. New Mutants suggests that she is pansexual, being into anything (with the exception of humans).
- Cyclops has been hit with a lot of this over the years, both by fans and by writers. Depending on the Writer he's either a kind, compassionate man who simply suffers from bad social skills or he's a stubborn Jerkass control freak who may or may not have developed some very bigoted disdain towards the humans who have persecuted him and his fellow mutants.
- In particular, a strong argument can be made that Scott's deepest relationship was not with either Jean Grey or Emma Frost...but with the Phoenix Force. He and Jean dated in high school, but the deepest part of their early relationship was during a period when the real Jean was being impersonated by the Phoenix. Word of God is that that part of Jean was later reincarnated as Madelyne Pryor, which is something that Cyclops never quite put his finger on. This gives a tragic bent to his (arguably accidental) abandonment of Madelyne and return to a resurrected Jean — but, importantly, a Jean with no memory of how their relationship had evolved past "we were dating in high school". Notably, X-Men: The End, Chris Claremont had Scott explain that the reason his and Jean's subsequent relationship never quite seemed right was because the parts of Jean that he truly fell in love with were the parts that had been reincarnated as Madelyne. This theory also puts his actions in Avengers vs. X-Men and Brian Michael Bendis's Uncanny X-Men into a slightly different light.
- Teen Jean Grey is a jerkass brat who abuses her newly-acquired telepathic powers or merely a flawed teenager reacting to an awful situation in believable ways?
- While Sabretooth's basic character and history remains the same from writer to writer, his competence and motivation swings wildly Depending on the Writer. More on that can be read on both below and back on his main page.
- Angst? What Angst?: Despite Jubilee's many, many, many traumatic experiences, she remains remarkably upbeat. She has strongly implied that this is just a front."I'm just a kid — if I want to pretend like nothin' never bothers me, that's my right as an immature brat."
- Americans Hate Tingle: Magneto: Testament is very popular amongst American readers for its realistic portrayal of the Holocaust among other things. However, in Poland, the nicest thing you will hear about it is that it's "the Holocaust made by Disney". It doesn't help that it alludes to a debunked story about Polish cavalry deliberately attacking German tanks, a myth that the Poles perhaps understandably don't take kindly to. It's to the point where they'll outright refuse to acknowledge any part of Magneto's life where he is named as Max Eisenhardt.
- Anvilicious: The anti-bigotry message that has pervaded every fiber of X-Men ever since Chris Claremont's run can be taken to laughable extremes. A recurring complaint is that the Muggles' hatred of mutants frequently gets exaggerated to ludicrous levels just so the message can be hammered further. The fact that these very same people are often shown to be perfectly fine with other superheroes in the Marvel Universe just makes it even sillier.
- Applicability: Anti-mutant prejudice can stand in for a metaphor for any number of Real Life prejudices. Fans have tended to take this very literally and argue about what the "original meaning" was and how it has changed. Word of God has confirmed, upon occasion, that individual writers have used it for a specific metaphorical purpose; Grant Morrison, for one, has said that they used their run to comment to the demonization of young people. Not even this squares completely with his comics, but it makes a lot more sense if you sympathize way too much with Quentin Quire. But that does not mean that every writer has used it as a metaphor, or has used it for the same one every time. That it has been so readily used as allegory for such diverging issues as racial tensions, LGBT struggles, McCarthyism, the Cold War, and generational conflict is proof enough of this. Interestingly, the movie series takes it at face-value: normal humans are terrified of going extinct, and the prospect of actually siring the species that will replace us is unthinkable, thus the fear and hatred. Analogies are also drawn in the film with the debate over American Gun Politics, with some mutant powers seen as threats to society by their very nature due to how useful they are for killing people.
- Arc Fatigue: A common complaint. Every time the X-Men seem to be getting close to having mutants and humans coexisting, the Reset Button gets smashed so the anti-bigotry Aesop can continue being bashed into the readers' skulls. This has led to Many Long Time Readers leaving the titles.
- This is also largely the reason behind why the M-Pox storyline is so poorly received; not only does it essentially repeat the same beats as Decimation did (mutants are going extinct, no more new mutants, etc), but its also a repeat of the earlier and similar Legacy Virus arc (disease targeting mutants, characters struggle to find a cure).
- Ascended Meme:
- Deadpool: "I just beat Mag-freakin-neto! Where yo curly mustasche at?!"Explanation
- Deadpool: "HAHAHA! Magneto! Welcome TO DIE!!!"Explanation
- Audience-Alienating Era:
- The most commonly regarded nadir for the X-Men titles is everything from the end of Operation: Zero Tolerance, to the start of the Morrison/Milligan/Claremont/Casey era.
- There is an overwhelming consensus that the start of The New '10s to around the mid-point of the decade was a flop era; this was when The Inhumans started to rise in prominence in the Marvel Universe... as in, they were forcibly pushed by Executive Meddling at the deliberate expense of the X-Men, something absolutely nobody but former CEO Ike Perlmutter actually wanted. The short version is that the cinematic rights of the X-Men franchise (along with the Fantastic Four) lay with 20th Century Fox as opposed to Disney/Marvel Studios, and while this only applied to the film rights, Perlmutter was jealous of the idea of another company being able to make money off of their IP. During this period there was a significant slowdown in X-Men related merchandise being made, the X-Men stopped appearing regularly in adaptations and promotions for Marvel, and comics-wise their standing in the Marvel Universe plummeted, further cemented after Secret Wars (2015) in which mutantkind was under threat of extinction and mutants were hated and feared more than ever — again. The fans had enough and after a few noteworthy events (namely the split of Marvel Studios from Marvel Entertainment, the wild success of Deadpool (2016), the failure of the Inhumans push along with their planned Marvel Cinematic Universe movie being downgraded to a TV show, and Marvel Entertainment and 20th Century Fox working together to make X-Men TV shows), the comics were relaunched in 2017 with a renewed focus on the team being heroes along with the eventual purchase of the majority of Fox’s entertainment assets which was finalized in March 2019. Then in July of 2019, the X-Men saw a massive Soft Reboot called the Krakoan Age which completely changed their place in the Marvel Universe, which not-conicidentally aligned with the rights to the franchise returning to Marvel.
- Poor Kurt went through a massive one after his return from Excalibur in the late 90s. First, he got turned into a priest with basically no build-up. Fans found this pretty strange, but at least the ensuing miniseries was well received for the most part. Chuck Austen then made some unpopular retcons in regards to his heritage. After the infamous Draco storyline no one really seemed to know what do with him. He was less frequently featured when Pixie (also a teleporter and supposedly much better at it than him) got introduced to the X-Men. Then he was outright killed during the X-Men: Second Coming storyline and didn't return to the comics for almost five years (although his Darker and Edgier counterpart Kurt Darkhölme from Age of Apocalypse found his way to the 616-universe during that time). Thankfully when he finally did return in Amazing X-Men, Jason Aaron managed to turn Azazel into a pretty cool hell pirate as well as bringing Kurt's characterization back on track. He has been with the main X-Men team ever since.
- Awesome Ego: Apocalypse. The most gloriously hammy and Shakespearian of all the X-Men villains. It's rare indeed for a story featuring the character to go by without him -rightly- bragging about his awesome power or invincibility, or references to notions like triumph or eternity in relation to himself.
- Badass Decay: Originally in the X-Franchise, Claremont wrote Sabretooth as Wolverine's superior, even stating that in all their lives, Logan has never defeated him in a straight up fight. He was a big enough threat to be locked up by the X-Men, while Xavier tried to rehab him. He becomes a Boxed Crook, and emotionally torments most who came to see him, even breaking Xavier and contributing to him becoming Onslaught. After escaping, he defeated everyone who confronted him — leaving them badly injured, in critical condition, or mentally scarred. Only Jean Grey was able to finally incapacitate him. He was sent to X-Factor and put in a restraining collar to keep him in line. He ends up escaping his confines once more and killing many X-Factor members, while critically injuring numerous others like Mystique and Wildchild. Afterwards, Sabretooth loses every fight he's in and Took a Level in Dumbass. At one point, he's beaten up, having a black eye and swearing revenge. It's followed by everyone laughing at him, and Logan asking when he's ever been a threat. It's very evident in Weapon X (2017), where he's treated as the team Butt-Monkey, and does nothing but annoy everyone he interacts with, while being of little to no use for anything. The editor of the comic, Chris Robinson, lists Sabretooth as the kind of villain who isn't a threat to anyone, except one particular hero (Wolverine),
- Broken Aesop:
- The X-Men was originally supposed to be a statement about general tolerance, peaceful coexistence, and opposing all forms of supremacism. Admittedly, the essential concept of an inherently "superior" race of superhumans being oppressed by the "inferior" normal humans sounds rather far-right supremacist in itself, but nevertheless, the original idea seems to have been a well-intended if clumsy allegory. However, as of the Krakoa storyline, genocidal sadistic supremacist psychopaths like Apocalypse, Mystique, Mr. Sinister, and Exodus are among the main decision-makers in the council of the community. The council also includes Emma Frost, who has a long history of torture and Mind Rape even after her Heel–Face Turn , and Sebastian Shaw, who is the ultimate absolutely egoistic, treacherous, and sexually abusive Corrupt Corporate Executive, and none of them have been taken to task for their past transgressions.
- Despite trying to lecture the world about how great mutants were and how they should be allowed to embrace their identities, Xavier spent most of his life masquerading as a normal human who just happened to be a mutant expert. Xavier only involuntarily 'outed' himself during Grant Morrison's New X-Men run when he was possessed by his evil twin. James McAvoy said he actually kept this in mind while portraying Xavier in X-Men: First Class. He pointed out that Xavier is a well-meaning, but ultimately misguided liberal, as he still has tons of societal advantages given that he's white, heterosexual, male, and extremely wealthy. He certainly doesn't have to put up with the same bigotry many mutants face (hell, the same bigotry many real world minorities still face), which causes his message of peace to ring if not false, at least simplistic to many.
- Also, compare Xavier's powerset to those of characters like Rogue, Toad, or Cyclops. Xavier has telepathy, a power that he can control perfectly, that has absolutely no negative effects on him physically or mentally, and that is a massive benefit to his life. In comparison? Rogue's powers render unconscious anyone she has physical contact with. She cannot control this or stop it in any way, and has resigned herself to being isolated from her peers. Her powers have drastically injured her self-esteem and social life. Toad's mutation
turned him into an ugly, lizardlike humanoid and made him the subject of severe bullying from other children. Cyclops projects a continuous wave of destructive energy from his eyes and relies on special glasses just to live a normal life. Even Phoenix, another telepath, is often overwhelmed by the thoughts of others, to the point of mental instability. Looking at the general trend of mutant powers, it's hard not to think that Xavier really lucked out where the Superpower Lottery was concerned.
- Also, compare Xavier's powerset to those of characters like Rogue, Toad, or Cyclops. Xavier has telepathy, a power that he can control perfectly, that has absolutely no negative effects on him physically or mentally, and that is a massive benefit to his life. In comparison? Rogue's powers render unconscious anyone she has physical contact with. She cannot control this or stop it in any way, and has resigned herself to being isolated from her peers. Her powers have drastically injured her self-esteem and social life. Toad's mutation
- In general, the X-Men books have a theme of how regular humans and mutants should coexist peacefully. The problem with this? Exactly how often did they try to have regular humans around them? How many regular humans were at the institute? How often did the X-Men go to Washington to try to convince legislators to accept mutants? The aesop seems more 'mutants should band together into militant groups to protect themselves', in other words Magneto's message. To make it even worse, the first comic featuring the X-Men had them casually push around regular human soldiers with their powers because the soldiers didn't want to let them enter a military base.
- A worse example would be when the Xavier Institute once employed a regular human nurse named Annie. At one point, they find a bunch of mutants who were crucified; Jean Grey used her telepathy to call Annie for help and was annoyed when she panicked after hearing Jean's voice in her head without any warning. Later, when Annie asks who would do such a thing, Iceman condescendingly replies "humans" while sneering at her.
- There's also a dissonance where the fear of mutants is portrayed as prejudice and fear of what's different, but there have been times when mutants - even fully-trained adults — have lost control of their powers without meaning to and caused a lot of damage. In the '90s X-Men cartoon, Storm was claustrophobic, causing her to freak out with her powers whenever she was triggered. Mutants are a danger to the normal humans around them no matter how good their intentions are and that is a perfectly valid reason for fear.
- Marvel got a ruling saying mutants (and other superhumans) weren't people for purposes of taxes and tariffs on merchandise. See here
. - Also, after decades of using mutants as a metaphor for an oppressed minority that we should love and respect, Joe Quesada mandates the Decimation event, in which a vast majority of the Marvel universe's mutants are depowered and there are in the low three digits of mutants left.
- Since their move to Utopia, the X-Men have been almost exclusively devoted to the survival of the dwindling numbers of their race, up to and including fighting The Avengers over a potential threat that might possibly re-ignite the X-gene worldwide. Even those who ended up siding with the Avengers to stop the Phoenix Five seem to have long forgotten that Xavier's dream was to have peaceful co-existence with humans, not complete segregation for the sake of safety (admittedly, this last one is done out of absolute necessity, but even Wolverine points out how far away from Xavier's vision the X-Men have moved).
- House of X asserts that coexistence with humanity is impossible and that mutants are better off embracing the Super Supremacist mindset the books have always spoke out against. Krakoa, the new mutant nation, not only offers resurrection to dead mutants but also miracle drugs that mutants can monopolize to effectively coerce the world's governments into giving them whatever they want. This the means that Marvel's allegories for oppressed minorities are now immortal beings who believe equality is a lie, preach genetic supremacy and have taken control of the worldwide economy.
- Can't Un-Hear It:
- The Apocalypse of the '90s animated series is by far the most popular incarnation of the character, thanks to a truly epic performance with what feels like every line from voice actor John Colicos, and subsequent adaptations like the Apocalypse of X-Men: Evolution and even the 2016 X-Men: Apocalypse film have felt the shadow of John Colicos's Apocalypse hang over them. And while it doesn't quite reach The Character Died with Him levels, few discussions of Apocalypse are without at least one lament of Colicos' 2000 death.
- Thanks to X-Men: The Animated Series and Wolverine and the X-Men (2009) respectively and depending on your preference, Chris Britton or Clancy Brown are the voice for Mr. Sinister.
- If you grew up in the '90s, then Don Francks is probably the voice you hear for Sabretooth. It almost sounds like even the comic character's lines were written with the voice in mind.
- Character Rerailment: From the late 2000s onwards, it's felt that Gambit's improved dramatically, starting with a major supporting role by Marjorie Liu in her X-23 series, where he served as a kind of mentor for Laura, which helped mature him as a character, taking him out of the edgy and irresponsible mould he'd previously occupied.
- Additionally, his late 00s and New 10s appearances helped by having other characters point out his chronic history of irresponsibility, with the likes of Peter Wisdom (Director MI13) warning him that there's only so long he can dance on both sides of the line, while Rogue advised that he couldn't be a member of the 'Avengers Unity Squad' on the grounds that, "at heart, Remy LeBeau will always be a thief", which Gambit admitted was true. However, in at least one case, this came with a heartwarming coda - as Logan put it, he was given a fairly ridiculous teaching role at the Jean Grey School (Sex Ed, at a school where a significant proportion of the students didn't even have genitals) with the expectation that he wouldn't be around a lot... but also that he'd be around when he was needed. He's also acknowledged the habit himself, stepping up by becoming King of the Thieves Guild (to keep it out of worse hands, later giving his father his proxy), and finally proposing to and marrying Rogue.
- Creator Worship: Chris Claremont is an odd case. As noted elsewhere on this page, there is a vocal contingent of diehard X-Men fans online that absolutely revere the man, elevating him into a Sacred Cow for his legendary 16-year run on the X-Men and brushing aside his more hit-or-miss work on the franchise afterwards. Len Wein, who got the All New All Different era started, who Claremont inherited Giant Size X-Men from as writer, is basically forgotten by comparison. On the other hand, Chris has become almost infamous in the fandom for his love of fetishes, excessive verbosity and tendency to mire his works in Kudzu Plot. Perhaps most puzzling, though, is that his greatest contribution to X-Men as a whole, emphasizing the "mutants-as-minority" message that would go on to become a cornerstone of the entire franchise, is largely forgotten, with many fans assuming it has just always been part of the X-Men from day one. In fact, the original incarnation of the X-Men as imagined by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby was little more than an Alternate Company Equivalent take on DC Comics' Doom Patrol, and the very reason the mutant concept was originally created was as an easy handwave to explain the source of the X-Men's superpowers (as opposed to the elaborate backstories that were then the norm for superheroes). While prejudice against the mutants was there almost from the get-go, it was not nearly as fundamental to the stories before Claremont.
- Crosses the Line Twice: The sheer length writers went to make sure readers hated Madelyne Pryor after Jean Grey returned. From becoming a Wet Blanket Wife, to making a Deal with the Devil, to enslaving Scott's brother Alex and forcing him to dress like a stripper while using her psychic powers to enjoy it, to climbing to the top of the Empire State Building with ten babies, one of which was her biological son to kill them all along with herself and bring Hell on Earth in the wake of their deaths just to spite Scott, to developing an incestuous crush on Nate Grey, being completely unbothered by the fact he was functionally her nephew, or more likely, due to the very artificial and targeted natures of their conceptions, her second son, to murdering Nate's girlfriend Melody Jacobs to get Threnody out of the way, to depicting her gleefully preparing to engage in cannibalism on the very cover of a comic book. If she wasn't a character originally designed to be liked she'd be up there with Sabretooth, Mister Sinister, Selene Gallio and Fabian Cortez among the X-Men's most vile villains, but since she was it's quite humorous.
- Crossover Ship: There has been an organic push among fans in the last few years to make Colossus a couple with Ka-Zar, or at the very least have them be in some kind of bromance. Presumably this is due to both characters being tall, brawny dudes with ties to the Savage Land (including both being parents of kids from the Savage Land). Partially justified in that artists seem to like having the two men share panels whenever they appear in the same book together.

- Designated Hero:
- In the early comics, Xavier could give this impression, with his habit of keeping secrets and insisting others do the same painting him as a far more morally-ambiguous figure than Lee and Kirby intended him to be. Later writers made this an actual character trait of his, and one that he is called out on and has to atone for.
- Depending on which one you were a fan of, Cyclops and Wolverine were this during the 2000s and the early 2010s. Some fans saw Cyclops as a violent extremist who refused to accept responsibility and justified his actions with weak excuses, while others saw Wolverine as a hypocrite who would rather waste time fighting with his allies than his enemies, and gets incredibly douchy in his arguments despite apparently being the one who audiences were supposed to side with.
- During the 2014 AXIS story arc, Sabretooth literally became one of these due to his inversion sticking after the story and his being positioned into heroic roles as a member of the Avengers Unity Squad and later Magneto's X-Men. While some readers have welcomed this take on the character, others have scorned it as it essentially asks readers to root for one of the X-Men's longest running and worst Complete Monster characters for no other reason than he's a good guy now because A Wizard Did It.
- A weirdly specific example is Magneto whenever he's persecuted by another non-mutant superhero (Secret Wars has a good example). The story tends to say he's the way he is because of prejudice, usually ignoring his 60's period of utter terrorism.
- Similar to her base-breaking status, many X-Men fans consider Wanda this, as she continues to operate as a heroic figure, especially after House of M.
- Designated Villain:
- Cyclops is frequently blamed for everything that goes wrong simply because he's the only one to step up to the plate and accept responsibility. The fact that he and Emma kissed and made out on Jean's grave doesn't help his reputation amongst fans or amongst other heroes at all, although people tend to forget the context of that (to put it simply, they are reasons why he is listed among those male characters in comics where their own rape is not addressed.
- Believe it or not, Cyclops became this in the time preceding the Inhumans vs X-Men event. After apparently doing something unforgivable, Cyclops is compared to Hitler by more than one person, and similar comments are made. Everyone despises him for crossing the Moral Event Horizon. We then eventually learn what he did and-... turns out he destroyed a terrigen cloud belonging to the Inhumans because it would have gassed all mutants on the planet to death had he not. Oh, and he was immediately killed for it. Even the reveal that he was dead all along and Emma was actually to blame for most for this did nothing to change reader's opinions that "Cyclops" was completely in the right, no matter what literally everyone claimed.
- He became this similarly in Avengers vs X-Men. Xavier and everyone else practically goads him into going Dark Phoenix and treats him as a terrorist for daring to stop the Avengers from kidnapping a mutant girl against her will. After the event, he's locked up with everyone ignoring the fact that Phoenix was possessing him the entire time he committed any kind of crime. Oh, and that's ignoring the Avengers trying their damndest to stop him from creating a Utopia for... everyone.
- Similarly Emma Frost rapidly became this after it was revealed that Cyclops had been killed by the Terrigen cloud and "Cyclops" was a psychic illusion created by her. In fact, some view her as even more sympathetic to the point of being the Only Sane Man for seeing that Cyclops (Actually her, but-) saved all of mutant kind with his actions. Even going nuts and trying to kill all the Inhumans didn't hurt her sympathy much as the Inhumans had previously killed Cyclops and came very close to enabling the genocide of Mutantkind.
- Die for Our Ship:
- Every corner of the Emma Frost/Scott Summers/Jean Grey/Logan love square has its shippers and detractors - and it's the same for Rogue/Gambit and every relationship here.
- Jason Aaron, the writer of Wolverine and the X-Men, was accused of doing this during his run. After Colossus turned into the Juggernaut, it resulted in Kitty breaking up with him... for some reason. Then he had Kitty, when she joined Wolverine, get together with Iceman, despite them never being depicted that close in the main comics. Likewise, when he broke up Black Panther and Storm in Avengers vs. X-Men, he had Storm migrate to his book and had her get together with Logan (though, at least this one made some sense).
- A little-remembered X-Man from the 90s is Joseph, who was literally killed off by the writers in part for his interfering with the Gambit/Rogue ship (the other part was him having no more narrative purpose since it was decided that he wasn't Magneto after all).
- Jean Grey is abruptly killed off by a single touch on the shoulder from Xorn/Magneto (just one issue after she survived being hurled into the sun, no less) to make room for the new Scott/Emma pairing in New X-Men. It's justified in-universe by the revelation that Scott and Emma not hooking up will lead to The End of the World as We Know It, and a ridiculously convoluted plot in which Jean's spirit psychically forces Scott to accept the new relationship without complaint. Apparently, gradually easing them into the relationship wasn't an option—Jean had to die right then, and Emma had to make out with Scott the day after it happened. On top of Jean's grave. It should be noted that Morrison did not do this because they themselves disliked Jean or preferred Scott with Emma (in fact, they expressed in interviews that they had several more stories planned for Jean had they stayed longer). Rather, it was because those higher on the totem pole felt Jean was too powerful and thus had to be removed.
- Don't Shoot the Message: The X-Men and mutants have long been representative of real world persecuted minority groups and their conflicts with the public are plain allegories for racism, homophobia, and other forms of bigotry. Although the franchise has been praised for tackling this sort of subject matter, it has also commonly been pointed out they make a somewhat poor comparison because mutants really are extremely different from regular humans and their powers often manifest in very dangerous ways that make them a tremendous threat to others or even themselves at times; not just villains, but even heroic characters who struggle to control their powers, often making it seem like the mutant haters are justified in being afraid of mutants. Especially because there are a large number of genuinely evil mutants who have used their powers to cause massive destruction and kill countless innocent people.
- Draco in Leather Pants:
- Due to his Freudian Excuse and generous use of the Heel–Face Revolving Door, Magneto tends to get hit with Leather Pants, with fans declaring him to be in the right even in his most extreme moments. On the other hand, he also gets hit with Death Eater status by his anti-fans, who tend to ignore that he hasn't really been a villain since before Grant Morrison's run - which was back in 2001.
- Sabretooth also gets his fair share of Leather Pants, especially post-X-Men Origins: Wolverine. The character is a cruel, psychotic serial killer, and probably one of the most loathsome Complete Monster villains the X-Men have ever faced, yet fans (and writers) bend over backwards to give him Freudian Excuse after Freudian Excuse.
- Even some of the human villains (William Stryker, for example) have those willing to argue how they're not really that bad, even when they're advocating outright genocide, or are established child killers, or both.
- Despite being one of the most sadistic and remorseless villains in the X-Men's rogues gallery (so much so that she has dated and a felt a kinship with Sabretooth), a good number of writers have tried redeeming Mystique, portraying her as redeemable, or just outright doing away with the need for redemption by granting her Adaptational Heroism over the years. As of 2020, she's in Nominal Hero territory as a member of the X-Men's Quiet Council, though with the X-Men themselves now in Graying Morality territory, that might say more about them than her.
- Ensemble Dark Horse:
- Doop was a fan-favorite in X-Force and X-Statix, and his return in Wolverine and the X-Men was much appreciated.
- Dr. Nemesis is a minor one due to being a hilarious, daredevil-like mad scientist.
- Despite Chuck Austen's work on the series being widely panned, Mammomax the Elephant Man, a mutant who resembles a giant, super-strong, humanoid elephant who spews acid, is surprisingly well-remembered by the fandom, probably due to his inherent Narm Charm.
- Though Death (Gambit as one of Apocalypse's Horsemen) has surprisingly few appearances, he's widely beloved by fans for fulfilling the premise of an evil Gambit. It's pretty much a given that any story in which he appears draws attention, and the tease for him potentially showing up in X-Men '97 led to rejoicing in the fandom.
- Blink. Though she barely made an impression when she first appeared (and quickly died), her portrayal in the Age of Apocalypse storyline turned her into a massive fan favorite, making her return inevitable.
- Beak was designed to be an ugly and unimpressive mutant bullied even by his peers, but became beloved by the fandom for being genuinely kind, brave, and charismatic when given the chance.
- Escapist Character:
- While many superheroes exist to serve as a power fantasy, Colossus's main purpose over the years has evolved into being a Romance fantasy. A Hunk with Chronic Hero Syndrome and pure-heartedness, Colossus could have stepped whole and breathing from the most wholesome books of the Romance Novel genre. Most of what he does and who he is is defined by his love relationships, another trademark of the romance novel love interest.
- Kitty Pryde fits the premise. She started out as the team's Naïve Newcomer, and grew up to be a badass ninja genius with a pet space dragon and Chris Pratt as her boyfriend. The fandom rejoiced, for they watched every step of this journey from Everygirl to Super-Special Heroine and wished they could be her (or "be with her"). Oh, and she became president in one timeline.
- Psylocke is popular with many fans precisely because she's both sexy and has it all. Betsy is filthy rich, a literal supermodel, becomes increasingly powerful as time goes on, a master ninja, assassin, secret agent, adventurer and pilot, and of course, is quite possibly the most sexy woman in the Marvel Universe. Is it any wonder fans often want to be her, or rather, be with her?
- Storm is one of the most overtly escapist in the entire X-Men mythos. She has won the Superpower Lottery; her powers over the weather make her easily one of the most powerful X-Men. She is also worshipped as a goddess, has incredible skills in both unarmed combat and thieving, led the team on several occasions, and is heart-stoppingly gorgeous. She keeps attracting lovers and admirers of both genders, and even some of her enemies want her.
- Estrogen Brigade: Gambit beats off fangirls with that adamantium stick of his.
- Ethnic Scrappy:
- Grant Morrison during their tenure writing created Angel Salvadore as some sort of vaguely Latina, foul-mouthed 14 year-old who was kicked out of her house by her step-father when her mutant powers developed.
- Maggott had an uphill climb with his bizarre power of two giant all-consuming pet slugs that act as his digestive system, but what really killed him as a character was his constant, exaggerated version of Afrikaans slang, which tended to focus on guava, biscuits, and sherbert. His dopey mohawak front-ponytail hair didn't help either.
- A really weird example is Psylocke, who became this for some in the 90s after she was kidnapped and forcibly modified to look like an Asian woman in preparation for forced servitude to the Mandarin of the Iron Man comic books. This was then retconned into her being body-swapped into a nubile Japanese ninja character named Kwannon(valid but archaic spelling of Kannon), who died, leaving Betsy "permanently" stuck in the Japanese body, but not before some bizarre psychic link caused Betsy and Kwannon to start taking on each other's physical traits to the point Wolverine couldn't distinguish them by scent anymore. Twenty years later, Adaptation Displacement has kicked in so thoroughly that most X-Men fans don't even know that character wasn't originally a Japanese ninja at all. Betsy and Kwannon finally get their "original" bodies back after decades, but still with the weird taking on each other's physical traits thing to the point they're only distinguishable by face and skin tone, the latter not even being consistent.
- Thunderbird plays with this. Many fans wonder what it would be like if he had not died, but he clearly would've fallen into this trope.
- Evil Is Cool: Many examples. Magneto, Mystique, Juggernaut, Sabretooth (on his better days), Dark Phoenix, Apocalypse, Mister Sinister, Bastion, Selene Gallio, Omega Red and Shadow King are just a few of them. Magneto is regarded by his fans as one of, if not the greatest villains in Marvel.
- Fan-Preferred Couple:
- In terms of sheer fan works, there's no more popular of a couple than Gambit and Rogue. There's a fairly large, vocal fanbase for current couple Magneto and Rogue (though that ship certainly has its detractors too). As of 2018 Rogue and Gambit are back together, got married and even have their own ongoing monthly series.
- As related on the X-Men Ho Yay page, a Comics Alliance poll
asking readers to vote for who Magneto should be with wound up with a staggering 96% of voters preferring the Magneto and Professor X relationship. While the actual numbers of this poll are not visible and it only represents online comics readers (and then only online comics readers that read Comics Alliance), it's hard not to call it compelling evidence for labeling the Magneto and Professor X couple as this. - Storm and Logan. Fans of the pairing cite that Opposites Attract, and that her reserve and idealism would balance out his Anti-Hero tendencies, while his more earthy, passionate nature would keep her stable and grounded. Also the fact that fans do NOT like the marriage between Storm and Black Panther (because of the brutal Strangled by the Red String) as well as Logan's borderline obsession with Jean.
- The two of them finally got together in 2014 when Storm and Black Panther's marriage got annulled in Wolverine and the X-Men, up until Wolverine's death in 2015. His return in 2023 never address this relationship.
- Fan-Preferred Cut Content:
- Nightcrawler's mother Mystique was originally planned to be his father (due to her shape-shifting abilities) before Executive Meddling kicked in. Many fans feel this would have been a great twist, dislike who his actual father turned out to be, and are holding out hope for a Retcon. Come 2024, and its become (almost) Ascended Fanon, with a Retcon that attempts to merge the two angles together by saying that Mystique did impregnate Destiny, but used her shapeshifting powers to both fake being pregnant herself and to use the DNA of both her husband Baron Christian Wagner (the human who was originally Nightcrawler's canonical father) and her male lover Azazel (Nightcrawler's first retconned biological father) as the template for her own sperm. Thus making Nightcrawler genetically a child of four parents; Mystique, Destiny, Azazel, and Christian Wagner.
- There were plans to have Jean Gray's sister, a well-liked Recurring Character, develop mutant powers and join X-Factor. Instead, she suffered a widely-disliked Dropped a Bridge on Him fate with little real emotional impact.
- Fanon: Many fans prefer to consider Chris Claremont's original plan for the identity of Nightcrawler's parents—that Mystique used her powers to temporarily become male and impregnate her lover Destiny—to be official Canon, largely because Chuck Austen's decision to make Azazel his father (thus making Nightcrawler half-demon) was met with such lukewarm reception.
- Fandom Rivalry:
- A fierce one has brewed between X-Men fans and The Avengers fans since the late 2000s thanks to the competition between their two individual cinematic adaptations. The Avengers vs. X-Men Crisis Crossover event and its perceived treatment of both teams added more fuel to the fire. X-Men fans have become increasingly resentful of the Avengers, accusing Marvel of playing favorites with the latter team due to Marvel Studios owning the film rights to the Avengers and the Marvel Cinematic Universe being a massively successful Cash-Cow Franchise, and subsequently conspiring to undermine the Fox-produced X-Men films (and to a lesser extent, the Fox-produced Fantastic Four film in 2015). Avengers fans denied this, accusing X-book fans of being conspiracy theorists despite Rob Liefeld outright telling people that was exactly what was happening, and after Ike Perlmutter's ousting from Marvel was further confirmed to have been true. Conversely, a lot of the criticisms Avengers fans have thrown at the X-Men (being too dark, exaggerated depiction of incompetent or abusive government and law enforcement figures, frequently recruiting former villains, a large cast, preachy anvilicious messages, etc.) are largely criticisms that equally fit the Avengers too, as well as other big superhero teams like DC's Justice League and Teen Titans. Once the deliberate downplaying of X-Men ceased around late 2017, the two sides began to cool off.
- An increasingly harsh rivalry between fans of the X-Men and fans of The Inhumans developed during a period of Executive Meddling that saw Marvel attempt to push the Inhumans as replacements for the X-Men (due to Fox holding film rights to the mutants). This rivalry was mercifully put to rest by the Disney buyout of Fox, but let's just say that things got heated during that time.
- Fans of Cyclops in particular dislike Wanda, or rather, how Wanda was forgiven for actions that amount to, at best, accidental genocide, while Cyclops was treated like he was a supervillain outside of the Bendis-written X-Books, despite doing far less damage in comparison.
- Somewhat to be expected given the fact of their canon-selves relationship, but Emma Frost fans and Jean Grey fans argue more than the women themselves do. This largely stems from Emma replacing Jean in all but name after Jean was killed off, combined with Jean's softer, more openly compassionate personality contrasting Emma's sourer, more Jerk with a Heart of Gold persona; for some fans, Jean is incredibly boring next to Emma, while others find Emma incredibly unlikeable.
- For reasons stated above, there are times when fans of Jubilee can get into quarrels with Kitty Pryde fans.
- Relating strongly to the above, it's not uncommon for Emma Frost fans and Jean Grey fans to butt heads, in a way similar to Cyclops fans and Wolverine fans. Some of the reasons even mirror (Emma fans think Jean's too nice and soft, and prefer Emma's antihero traits, while Jean fans appreciate Jean's uncompromising compassion and heroics and dislike Emma's Jerkass nature and her Karma Houdini status, not unlike how Wolverine fans call Cyclops boring for being a more straight-laced hero and Cyclops fans call Wolverine an asshole hypocrite). Emma fans also frequently call Jean an Invincible Hero in the same vein as Superman due to her (perceived) OP nature (especially when the Phoenix is in play, which they treat as being standard), while Jean fans call Emma a Creator's Pet due to how she was pushed into taking Jean's place as Cyclops' partner and headmistress of the school, despite the character's relatively controversial nature among fans. A lot ultimately comes down to shipping reasons, of course (see above for an example of that infecting canon).
- Fanon Discontinuity: A lot of stuff is contested by fans, but if there's one thing fans can agree on, it's that Chuck Austen's entire run should be relegated to the wastebin of history.
- Madelyne Pryor went from a happy partner to Scott Summers to a Wet Blanket Wife because Chris Claremont didn't want to make Cyclops and active team member of an x-team again, nor did he want to bring back Jean Grey after creating Rachel Summers and Madelyne Pryor, so he resolved to make all involved looked bad as a form of protest. Then Madelyne Pryor became a lunatic who made deals with devils, brainwash people, attempted to kill babies and openly lusted after her functional children because writers following Claremont just wanted to kill her off and turned her into the biggest Hate Sink they could. While this initially all worked to make the characters various degrees of disliked, Pryor more than anyone, over the years, fans looked back at older issues and started to wish Madelyne hadn't been derailed by Writer Revolt and Writer on Board, then gradually started pretending like she never had been. It didn't help that Jean Grey reabsorbed the parts of her soul needed to create Madelyne in the first place, even gaining Pryor's memory, but Madelyne somehow repeatedly returned from nonexistence to menace Scott and the X-Men anyway.
- That time John Byrne tried to turn Wanda evil.
- To say that the revelation in AXIS that Wanda (and Quicksilver) no longer being related to Magneto, despite the fact that Pietro is pretty much identical to his father, was received poorly is an understatement. Since then, it has been largely ignored by the fandom.
- The Tomb of Dracula crossover is often ignored by fans of the later series due to its killing off the well-liked Rachel Van Helsing in a series with radically different themes from her original one.
- "The End of the Greys" arc has a lot of Collateral Angst in exchange for relatively minimal useful story progression, and while it is far from universally hated, there are a good number of fans who would like to think it never happened.
- Fan Nickname: Buckethead for Magneto due to the shape of his helmet resembling such.
- Fan Wank: Some fans who care about the official Marvel Handbook suggest that M's official stats being far lower than what is displayed in the comic books is due to her powers mostly being psionic in nature. Which is to put in plain terms, means she gets a boost to her everything precisely because she thinks she's stronger, faster, smarter etc. than she logically should be. It's more likely there was miscommunication between the comic book and handbook writers, or that no one ever bothered to update the stats of C-Lister, similar to Carol Danvers never getting her stats updated until she got pushed as the next Captain Marvel.
- Fashion-Victim Villain:
- Changeling.
Presumably the reason he's remained dead for so long is so no one will have to see that horrible headwear ever again. - A close second is Mesmero, who... well, just look at him
◊.
- Changeling.
- Franchise Original Sin: Mutants are hated and feared because of their superhuman powers, by the same people that praise the Fantastic Four and the Avengers as celebrities. This wasn't much of an issue back in the day because the "shared universe" concept largely meant just that characters from one comic book may make cameos and guest appearances in another, and there wasn't much exploration on the specifics of the world itself. And, other than when those meetings took place, comics were still largely self-contained and developed their own characters, concepts and lore. And the whole point of the Charles Xavier starting the X-Men was that mutants would come to be as beloved as the Fantastic Four. By the time the Marvel Universe became more connected, the chasm in the in-universe popular reception of those groups of heroes was unavoidable, but the X-Men comics have refused to let Xavier simply accomplish his goal.
- Friendly Fandoms: With fans of X-23. While Jubilee and Kitty Pryde fans have a bit of a Fandom Rivalry, their fanbase gets along quite well because of Jubes' Cool Big Sis dynamic with Laura, along with a touch of Les Yay thanks to Sana Takeda.
- Genius Bonus:
- The word "sinister" comes from the Latin word for "left". When X-villain Mr. Sinister first appears (as a shadowy figure in Sabertooth's memories) he has his left hand upraised.
- Chris Claremont has something of a reputation for sneakily circumventing his editors in this way. For instance, when Marvel editorial nixed his plans to make Mystique and Destiny the biological parents of Nightcrawler he hinted at it by referring to Destiny as Mystique's leman, an archaic term for a lover that few children (or editors) would catch.
- Growing the Beard: The original comic was considered one of the weakest and poorest-selling of the Lee-Kirby creations. In 1969 Neal Adams took over the art, and, in collaboration with writer Roy Thomas, turned it from one of Marvel's worst books to one of its best. It didn't save the title from cancellation, but gained it a cult following that lead to regular reprint demand and helped lead to the more successful 1975 revamp.
- Hard-to-Adapt Work: X-Men, while they were one of the first comic properties to get a high-profile adaptation (as well as an iconic animated series a decade prior) overall they’ve proven hard to do justice to on film as an ensemble team, especially compared to their Avengers counterparts. One problem is there’s simply so many of them and many have spectacular powers that would require a massive budget to be properly done well on screen, which may be partly why the films focus on more grounded mutants with less splashy powers like Wolverine and Mystique. Though this focus on certain characters over others, seriously cuts into the character dynamics, relationships, and personal arcs that people liked so much about the comics and leaves a good many fan-favourite characters by the wayside. X-Men: First Class is so beloved in particular because it’s one of the few films in the series to embrace the campy colourful energy of the comics and give everyone a chance to shine. Though the rest of the films’ more grounded approach to the property has made it troublesome when it comes to adapting the more out there storylines from the comics.
- Certain X-Men characters in general (with the obvious exceptions of Wolverine, Professor X, Magneto and eventually Deadpool) have had difficulty getting portrayed very well on screen. Which is often due to budgetary reasons, the characters being too complex, or just the filmmakers not having a clue what to do with them or why people like them. Not to mention connections to the greater Marvel universe which were off-limits.
- Cyclops has had poor luck both in films as well as cartoons to a lesser extent. He’s supposed to be The Leader and a mutant Captain America with Hidden Depths and compelling tragedy to his character underneath his serious nature in the comics. Sadly, a lot of adaptations just struggle to find anything to do with him compared to “cooler” and more charismatic X-Men like Wolverine or Gambit, so Scott becomes a Standardized Leader as a result. In the first film trilogy his position as the "obstacle” between Wolverine and Jean is flanderized to the point where it detracts from his other qualities and makes him kind of a Flat Character. The rebooted films do try and fix this starting with X-Men: Apocalypse making him rebellious, but he still ultimately gets demoted to being a side character again as a result of the push to make Mystique a hero in Apocalypse and high focus on Jean's troubles in Dark Phoenix. X-Men '97 got much appreciation for actually portraying Scott as a genuinely cool and compelling character for once (and even that took a dedicated storyboard artist who was a fan of Cyclops pushing for it at every turn).
- Jean Grey has had a hard go of it when it comes to most adaptations. In the comics, while Jean gets Chickification from time to time, she’s generally as badass and powerful as Storm or Rogue even when she isn’t Phoenix (her most well known incarnation) and shockingly for more casual fans can actually have storylines that don’t involve her love interests, Cyclops or Wolverine, at all. Sadly a good deal of adaptations can’t resist putting Jean in more of a Troi-esque role of being the female psychic that has many My Skull Runneth Over moments and who’s also the main subject of romantic subplots; which seriously cuts into Jean’s competencies from the comics and often reduces her to more of a static character. Another issue that makes Jean troublesome to adapt is that it’s practically impossible to divorce her from the Superpowered Evil Side Phoenix Force, which while undeniably iconic severely limits what you can do with her in story. The X-Men Film Series twice gave Jean little room to develop as a character, before throwing her head first into the Dark Phoenix plot, making the emotional pay off to Jean’s Fallen Hero arc feel rushed and unearned. X-Men: Evolution’s incarnation of Jean was appreciated explicitly for avoiding problems that plague her character in other adaptations, and subsequently be Truer to the Text for it. X-Men '97 despite being a continuation of the series where Jean got the most Chickification, actually manages to avoid the pitfalls of most other adaptations and makes Jean compelling and interesting, largely thanks to the Dark Phoenix storyline having already been done and delving into the Inferno plot line instead, which hadn’t been adapted before.
- Storm has a very hard go of it when it comes to live action. Despite Blade (1998) proving two years prior black superheroes could be extremely viable and Storm being a very important character for equality in the comics and generally just being awesome, the filmmakers simply didn’t know what to do with her, leading to Ororo getting Demoted to Extra. Two issues that make Ororo difficult to adapt is that 1) she has a big backstory unrelated to the other American-based X-Men, being from Kenya where she was worshipped as a goddess and 2) her weather powers are massively varied and costly to film, which is likely why the films at most have her shoot some lightning while occasionally summoning rain or high force winds. Her African background wasn’t touched in the original trilogy with only a Kenyan accent being a nod to her roots, but it was dropped by the second movie. X-Men Apocalypse at least features Ororo as a Street Urchin in Cairo like in the comics, but still use her mainly to shill Mystique and be a Horseman of Apocalypse before demoting her to side character again.
- Rogue, despite having been adapted fairly faithfully in the 90s animated series, ultimately got the hardest deal when it comes to being adapted to film. One conflicting issue is the two aspects of her character that fans love from the comics. On one hand she has a great deal of tragedy being unable to touch others (perfect for the core themes of discrimination), but on the other hand she’s also a confident Flying Brick Action Girl similar to Wonder Woman or Supergirl and those two traits don’t often overlap, and the filmmakers were more interested in the former. Another problem for the films is that her origins and powers are closely tied to Carol Danvers, whom Fox wasn't allowed to use and wouldn’t appear in a Marvel film until 19 years later. This meant that while Rogue served as a good Audience Surrogate in the first film, the promise of her taking a level in badass like the comics was unfulfilled since the films shifted focus away from Rogue to other characters and no real attempt was made to power her up or move past her timidity. Fair to note X-Men: Evolution featured a similarly reclusive Rogue to match her isolating mutation, though that series still successfully highlights how powerful she is despite her reclusive attitude. Wolverine and the X-Men (2009) also managed to adapt Rogue pretty well, playing up her confident Southern Belle side more. Both said 2000s animated shows also didn’t require Carol Danvers to be involved for Rogue to be powerful and relevant.
- Psylocke has proven to be a considerable bother to adapt compared to other characters, in the films as well as cartoons. The main problem is that Betsy’s origins are complex even by Marvel standards, being the sister of Captain Britain and a mutant but got kidnapped by the Hand, who subsequently had her mind removed from her original body and placed inside that of a Japanese assassin, which in turn raises the debate of whether she should be played by a Caucasian or Asian actor (in her two film appearances she’s been played by both). That’s not even getting into the stereotypical portrayal of a Japanese woman’s body being used for sex appeal, when she’s actually a British woman on the inside, which is likely why Marvel Rivals used Betsy’s Japanese Alternate Self Sai instead. Also, while she’s admittedly more of an Anti-Hero than the more traditionally heroic majority of the X-Men, Psylocke is still very much part of the team in the comics; and yet to seemly cut down on the number of characters, most adaptations barring video games make her an outsider to the team, and the films and Wolverine and the X-Men (2009) make her an outright villain to them. X-Men: Evolution was going to feature her as a SHIELD agent rather than a member of an X-Team. Further not helping matters is how creators can often feel the need to engage in Cast Speciation since she can otherwise seem redundant as a result of how, despite her powers being much flashier than those of Jean Gray and Professor X, she is still explicitly a telepath in a team which already has two other telepaths in its roster. The 90s cartoon and X-Men Apocalypse at least makes some concession for her comic book look and connection to Angel, but that’s about it.
- Jubilee has had rotten luck when it comes to be adapted to live action (the 90s cartoon at least made her iconic). The difficulty with Jubilee is that unlike other iconic teen appeal characters like Kitty Pryde she’s very much synonymous with the 90s with her garish wardrobe and punk attitude being precisely why fans love her in the first place, however the filmmakers consider her too much of a Unintentional Period Piece and her goofiness too clashing with the more serious tone of the films. This likely why she was Demoted to Extra in the original timeline and wasn’t much more than a cameo for the rebooted films. X-Men: Evolution also made her more of a secondary character and just gave her the yellow jacket, with jeans instead of shorts and no pink sunglasses, with her difficulty in being adapted properly likely playing a factor in being one of the two younger X-Men students pulled from Xavier's School (the other being Wolfsbane) following the greater public awareness of mutants halfway through the show. X-Men '97 managed to make Jubilee popular again
by leaning right into how unapologetically 90s she is; whilst also showing her Character Development since the original series. - Gambit is one of the most popular and beloved X-Men of all time. However the reason his solo movie starring Channing Tatum was in Development Hell for so long can at least partially be attributed to this. While the Marvel cartoons and games have had no difficulty adapting Gambit faithfully (barring Wolverine and the X-Men (2009) where he is an amoral thief-for-hire), his character in a live-action setting like Jubilee can come off as a Unintentional Period Piece and too silly to be taken seriously with his 90s purple coloured bodysuit, playing card motif and outrageous Cajun accent. The original X-Men film trilogy outright refused to include him at all and had Rogue be Iceman’s love interest instead. When Gambit did make his cinematic debut in X-Men Origins: Wolverine played by Taylor Kitsch, his appearance was drastically changed from his vibrant comic outfit to a more generic black suit and coat. Come Deadpool & Wolverine however and Channing Tatum would finally get to play Gambit in a comic accurate costume, lean fully into the character’s funny traits and be genuinely badass to boot, proving the character can absolutely work on screen.
- Apocalypse, despite being the most iconic X-Men villain next to Magneto, didn’t make it to screen as successfully as the Master of Magnetism. In the comics, he’s really supposed to be a hulking force of nature very similar to Thanos or Darkseid with his armoured body and self-manipulating powers being entirely 80s-90s style Rule of Cool. But since the X-Men films generally went for a grounded approach when it comes to most characters and rarely ever used CG for them (barring Colossus and Juggernaut in Deadpool and Deadpool 2), movie Apocalypse was instead poor Oscar Isaac in heavy makeup and the results weren’t quite satisfactory with the lack of his Evil Is Bigger menace making him look closer to Ivan Ooze to some fans. Another issue is that a lot of Apocalypse’s origins are tied to the Celestials, which helps to justify his power. But since the Celestials were off-limits for Fox, Apocalypse’s powers were much vaguer in the film, which made it rather difficult for audiences to understand or comprehend his threat, especially compared to a villain like Thanos with the Infinity Gauntlet. As a faithful Apocalypse would also be too overpowered for the film versions of the X-Men, he had to be nerfed heavily (though still powerful enough that most of the X-Men have trouble fighting him for most of the movie and only Jean Grey could win in the end) to justifiably be defeated in a single movie.
- Certain X-Men characters in general (with the obvious exceptions of Wolverine, Professor X, Magneto and eventually Deadpool) have had difficulty getting portrayed very well on screen. Which is often due to budgetary reasons, the characters being too complex, or just the filmmakers not having a clue what to do with them or why people like them. Not to mention connections to the greater Marvel universe which were off-limits.
- Harsher in Hindsight:
- During the battle with Stryker's cult in Weapon X #24, Monet and Creed are about to be thrown into the blade pit as sacrifices as he apologizes to her for the mess. Monet tells him to stop apologizing and think of something or she'll shove him into the pit herself, which amuses Creed. Cue issue 27. which is the last time Monet saw him.
◊ - Prior to AvX, Cyclops and Captain America actually had quite a positive working relationship, which included at least one story where they teamed-up that was filled with Ho Yay due to their mutual respect for one-another. The fact the two are not that different actually makes this dynamic make a lot of sense, but sadly it's unlikely we'll ever see that shown again.
- In an older characterization, Magneto once subjected the Scarlet Witch to what can only be called sexual abuse, using mind control to force her to dance suggestively for his pleasure. As later continuity reveals, this was his own daughter that he subjected to such degrading treatment, being unaware of their true relationship. Similarly, his massive psychological (and occasionally physical) abuse of the Witch in the early days of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants also looks worse for the same reason.
- Professor X's many cases of psychic Superdickery in the Silver Age can come off as this to modern viewers, particularly his brainwashing of the Vanisher since that character is a recurring one to this day and yet has never recovered. His Never Live It Down moment mentioned below also became this after the events of Onslaught.
- During the battle with Stryker's cult in Weapon X #24, Monet and Creed are about to be thrown into the blade pit as sacrifices as he apologizes to her for the mess. Monet tells him to stop apologizing and think of something or she'll shove him into the pit herself, which amuses Creed. Cue issue 27. which is the last time Monet saw him.
- He's Just Hiding:
- It has been noted by fans that not all of the Grey relatives from "The End of the Greys" story were killed onscreen or had their bodies shown and some could have somehow survived without the X-Men realizing. Specifically, the Bailey/Shatter Box twins (long-time characters with telekinetic powers which might have come in handy) and {Bit Character}}s Derry Campbell, Kindra, Mary-Margaret and the unnamed brother of Terry Maguire.
- Since the introduction of the Krakoa Resurrection Protocols, even if a dead mutant (like U-Go Girl, Petra, Sway, Adrienne, Silver Fox, Cannon Foot, Beautiful Dreamer, or the Shatter Box Twins) or character who could have latent mutant genes or powers (like uninterested hereditary Hellfire Club member Candy Southern and seemingly unpowered members of the Grey, Logan/Hudson, and Rasputin families) hasn’t shown up alive there, there are likely fans speculating that character has been resurrected offscreen.
- Hilarious in Hindsight:
- 1968 saw issue #48 and an encounter with Computo, an artificial intelligence that could create his own cybernetic mooks. They were called Cybertrons — a term put to more extensive use in a different franchise, one that included a Marvel comic.
- In the 1960s, several stories had Scott Summers reject offers by Magneto to join the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants citing his preference for Xavier's coexistence beliefs and even foiled a plot by Magneto to create a new generation of artificially made mutants. Present day, Cyclops is now, constantly, being compared to Magneto due to his more extreme methods of protecting mutants. Magneto even tends to act as Scott's Lancer.
- The original X-Men stories in the 1960s featured a pretty clear power ranking for the team members by continually referring to individual members as "the strongest X-Man", "the weakest member", "the second weakest member" and so on. The members seemed to be ranked as such (from strongest to weakest): Cyclops, Beast, Angel, Iceman, Marvel Girl (Jean Grey). Fast forward to modern day: guess which two members of the original team are now Omega-level mutants?
- Giant-Size X-Men #1 ends with Angel asking "what are we going to do with thirteen X-Men?" Little did anyone guess how huge the group would get in subsequent decades.
- Back in 1977, Superboy And The Legion of Super Heroes had a deconstructive commentary on X-Men, showing that if a truly superior race of mutants really had been discriminated against they'd just leave the pitiful baseline humans on Earth and found their own, better society on another planet. Further issues go on to show this situation is entirely preferrable for both humans and their mutants offshoots. Fast forward to Planet-Size X-Men in 2021, where Magneto does just that and colonizes Mars. Unlike the DC example, it isn't enough to keep the enemies of mutants away.
- In Uncanny X-Men #235 in 1988, a friend (Madelyne Pryor) of the X-Men radioed a call for help to them with the codename/callsign "Rogue one", which decades later became the coincidental film title with the franchise which Marvel Comics used to be part of, but wasn't any longer at that time, but which Marvel became part of all over again decades later.
- In Uncanny X-Men #155
, Kitty uses an alien machine that allowed her to instantly create any outfit she could imagine. One of those outfits was a Darth Vader costume. Both Marvel Comics and the Star Wars franchise are now owned by Disney. - A cross-media example: in 1993, Sega released X-Men (1993), a game with a then-original plotline focused on what would happen if the Danger Room were to turn on the X-Men. Fast forward to 2005's Astonishing X-Men, which puts forth a very similar plot, only with the plot twist of the Danger Room itself turning evil rather than being corrupted by Magneto.
- A 90s issue of What... Huh? had Iceman crushing on Angel (as a parody of Scott and Jean's early Cannot Spit It Out routine). And then in the 2010s...
- A 1989 issue of Excalibur had Kitty Pryde mocking high-school cheerleaders as cowardly, worthless bimbos compared to a superhero teenager like her. Not only do these girls end up becoming her friends, later, but Marvel Comics would be purchased and owned by the Disney corporation in 2009, and one of Disney's most popular animated television-series characters was a crime-fighting high-school cheerleader.
- In the RiffTrax addition of X2: X-Men United, one of the jokes had Bobby's father accidentally call him gay and, when corrected as being a mutant, having it shrugged off as "same difference". A few years later...
- In X-Men: The Last Stand Iceman's involved in a Not What It Looks Like situation - where Rogue gets jealous of how much time he's spending with Kitty. Kitty's actor Elliot Page later came out as a lesbiannote , the character he played later came out as bisexual in the comics, Rogue's Anna Paquin as bisexual, and the character himself has been retconned to be gay.
- While playing chess in X-Factor in Issue #216, Monet says that she always plays with black pieces because she'd rather avoid the White Queen chess piece. In Uncanny X-Men (2016), Monet has joined the Hellfire Club as its new White Queen.
- Monet's bond with Sabretooth causes a bit of this.
- During Generation X, she and Jubilee had a contemptuous rivalry. Jubilee is the more openly heroic, sympathetic one and she's close with Wolverine. Monet is more of a provocative Jerkass and she became close with Sabretooth.
- During Phalanx Covenant, Sabretooth saves Synch from the Phalanx. This means Monet's first love was rescued by the man who'd later become her second.
- When the Phalanx is defeated, "M" goes back to rescue the unconscious Sabretooth from the impending explosion. So adding to the puzzle, Monet's first love was rescued by her second who was able to become her second due to her sisters, the M-twins, saving him.
- As listed above, several fans have seen... subtext between Xavier and Magneto in various media portrayals, including the '90s cartoon (especially in the series finale) and X-Men: First Class. Ian McKellen, who portrays him in the live-action films, is openly gay.
- In The Fantastic Four (1978) episode "The Menace of Magneto", Magneto is depicted as an obnoxious but petty criminal of little regard. Reed Richards even claimed to have never heard of him, and as he didn't have an appointment, had the Baxter Building doorman tell Magneto to "get lost".
- The joke about mistakenly calling a comic book X-Man instead of X-Men loses its meaning when there is a comic book called X-Man.
- Hype Backlash: After years of being far and away the most prominent and promoted X-Man, it seems that Wolverine's hype has finally reached a ceiling as a 2014 storyline, The Death of Wolverine, was introduced just to kill him off (but not before letting longtime nemesis Sabretooth give him a long “The Reason You Suck” Speech). While the character only stayed dead for three years before the inevitable revival, he's largely been demoted as the spotlight hog du jour in favor of Deadpool, and even within his immediate character cast X-23 and Old Man Logan have been higher up in the Spotlight-Stealing Squad stack than the old Canucklehead.
- Iconic Sequel Outfit: For some members, like Cyclops, Storm, Rogue, and Wolverine, their blue and yellow 90's outfits are the most recognizable.
- I Knew It!: Since her introduction in 2007, in Messiah Complex, Hope Summers, the "Mutant Messiah", has been teased as having some connection with the Phoenix. Although Word of God dismissed the notion that she was a reincarnated Jean Grey or somesuch, since then fans have elaborated on how she was related to the entity. In X-Men: Forever (2024), it is revealed that Jean Grey/The Phoenix travelled back in time to implant Hope in her birth mother's body nine months before her birth.
- Informed Wrongness:
- Whenever Rogue considers having her powers removed — a storyline that often comes up in the comics, the cartoons and the movies — the moral is always "Be proud of the things that make you different." It's often stated or implied that a mutant neutralizing their X-gene would be akin to a black person bleaching their skin. However, the issues here are more than skin-deep: 1. Rogue's involuntary Power Copying creates a burden on her life by not allowing her physical contact without harming the other person. 2. Since she often struggles with the absorbed psyches in her head, her powers are a danger to herself as well. 3. It's her body. She shouldn't be shamed for what's essentially a medical decision. It also ignores the issue of the number of mutants who have such extreme physical changes that they're regarded as monsters and can't integrate with society even if their powers are harmless or at least controllable.
- Jason Aaron loves to have characters hate on Cyclops. In Schism, Wolverine and mutants siding with him break off from Cyclops. Wolverine cites that children shouldn't be trained to fight... even though the X-Men have always trained kids to defend themselves, and that, at the time of Schism, mutants were near-extinct, and anti-mutant violence was at an all-time high. It doesn't help that Wolverine himself makes a point of taking a teenage girl under his wing every decade or so. Especially mind-numbing is the fact that Wolverine's plan is essentially to run way and hope they escape, and to encourage them to run he rigs the whole island to explode. In the end, the students start fighting off the Sentinel while the two fight, and when they realize this, Wolverine abandons his plan to help do the exact thing Cyclops said they should... and yet in the end, instead of admitting Scott was right, he leaves, because Scott is making the students fight their battles (despite the fact that, if he doesn't let them fight, them and everyone else will die).
- In the aftermath of Avengers vs. X-Men, Aaron makes it a point to have characters get angry at and insult Cyclops literally whenever they meet, even characters that don't hate him in other books, and regardless of the current situation. Characters have called out Cyclops for training his students to fight and taking them in his missions... Which the X-Men do fairly often. No matter what Cyclops' students are all college aged or older. Hell, after Cyclops shows concern for Wolverine and saves his life, Logan decides to be a dick to him.
- In the All-New, All-Different Marvel, Cyclops is thought to be dead, but before that did something that has made people hate mutants again. For a long while it wasn't explained what exactly it is that he did, as writers constantly avoided details beyond it having something to do with the Inhumans and the Terrigen Mists killing mutants Finally it came to light that the horrible, nauseating, EVIL thing Cyclops did was trying to save mutants from extinction at the hands of the Terrigen mist clouds that the Inhumans let loose on the world to transform people into Inhumans, and it just so happened to be absolutely lethal to mutants. Cyclops heinous action was to modify one of the clouds to make it harmless, which was treated by everyone in-universe as tantamount to something Hitler himself would do (he literally gets called Hitler). The big reveal at the end of it all was that Cyclops in fact died shortly after the beginning of the series due to the cloud and all of his oh-so-evil actions were in fact a psychic projection Emma Frost created in order to make the world believe Black Bolt had executed him.
- Iron Woobie:
- Honestly, Piotr's life wasn't great shakes even before the '90s, but the Trauma Conga Line he endured then (that killed off both his parents as well as (temporarily) his brother and sister) was so... well, traumatic, that it's really amazing that he's held onto his pure-heartedness. Of course he didn't at the time — in fact, he hit a Despair Event Horizon and pulled a Face–Heel Turn — but he's since recovered his firm moral principles and remains one of the strongest candidates for The Paragon out of all the X-Men.
- Scott's gone through so much shit in his life it's not a surprise he can come across as cold or uncaring sometimes. Still, his actions to protect what's left of the mutant race stem from the mutant race being the only thing he has left to fight for.
- Both young and old Cyclops in All-New X-Men also become major woobies by the fifth issue. Old Cyclops has to deal with even his own team hating his guts, his former family hunting him, and the world at large wanting him dead, for actions he did while not in control of his own body, all the while he's trying to do good. Young Cyclops, however, has to deal with his friends giving him the cold shoulder, the fear that he's going to degenerate into a seemingly mess that killed his father figure, and all the present day X-Men looking at him with a contempt due to their hatred of his present self that he just does not understand. It does not help that as time goes on, he increasingly notes the glaring flaws in his detractor's philosophy, and the extenuating circumstances in his future counterpart.
- It's the Same, So It Sucks: Part of why Schism and the subsequent X-Men civil war didn't particularly work was that the leaders of the two factions were Cyclops and Wolverine, i.e. the two grown men who have been bickering like teenagers since 1975. Disregarding the fact that it basically required each man to do a compete backflip on their established characterisation, as an interpersonal conflict it had been very much done to death. It came off less as a clash of ideologies like the Professor X/Magneto dynamic it was clearly trying to replicate, and more as two macho, alpha male idiots who lack the maturity to talk through their issues like rational adults escalating a petty personal rivalry and dragging everybody else into it. Hell, it even follows similar beats to their fights in the past: the breaking point which finally brings them to blows isn't an argument over high-minded ideals, it's just them fighting over Jean (again), who had been dead for years at that point (again).
- It Was His Sled: Cyclop's involvement in some (if not all) of the most prominent, memorable, and/or classic X-Men stories means that any one familiar with comics in the least probably knows a lot about him.
- Jerkass Woobie:
- Wolverine and Magneto are two of the most famous examples in the Marvel Universe. Wolverine is more Woobie than Jerkass but Magneto fits perfectly.
- Many people accuse Magneto of being a genocidal maniac, and hold the high number of casualties of his quest for mutant freedom against him. Nonetheless, they still pity him after all the ways in which he has been wronged by the worst of humanity.
- Quicksilver is arrogant and hot-tempered (and has done some pretty downright stupid and horrible things), but his life has just been so darned painful that it's hard not to feel some pity for him.
- Emma Frost's background makes her qualify for this, and in addition Emma lost all of her students three times, was the Sole Survivor of a massacre that killed more than 14 million people, and struggles with herself a lot for her past (and present) morally questionable acts.
- Illyana Rasputin is a legitimate major case of woobie, but also a jerkass, hence a Jerkass Woobie per definition.
- Yes, 05 Jean is immature and abuses her telepathy. But let's recap: She's a fifteen/sixteen-year-old child who has gotten a traumatic childhood and has just joined a super-team. Then she's all of sudden transported to an horrible future where mutants are ever-persecuted, the X-Men are divided, the love of her life/future two-timing husband has apparently become a lunatic terrorist and murderer (specifically, of their mentor) and she herself has gone crazy, killed billions and died twice, and her hypothetical children (all of whom are older than her) have led awful lives in awful futures. Oh, and her family, aside from said children? They're all dead. Also, her telepathic powers have blossomed before she was ready to control them , and they reveal - even if she isn't trying to mind-read - that most of people surrounding her are two-faced jerkasses or self-serving liars. And that's just the start. Understandably, she's developed an attitude issue.
- A notable part of Jean's Character Development is moving past this. It partially resurfaces in her solo series, but that's mostly because a) the Phoenix is coming for her (if not for the reasons she suspects), b) she's being literally haunted by her older self.
- Nate Grey progresses into this in Uncanny X-Men (2018), with his determination to save the world (and more specifically, the X-Men) whether it wants/they want to be saved or not. Progresses out of it again at the end of Age of X-Man when he ends things peacefully, letting everyone go, after explaining just why he'd done what he did, and beginning to reform the Age of X-Man with a copy of that world's version of Magneto.
- Wolverine and Magneto are two of the most famous examples in the Marvel Universe. Wolverine is more Woobie than Jerkass but Magneto fits perfectly.
- Launcher of a Thousand Ships:
- Scarlet Witch has been the target of a lot of character's affections, including Angel, Toad, Mastermind, Captain America, Hawkeye, The Vision, Wonder Man, Nightcrawler, Doctor Doom, Doctor Strange, Arkon, Iron Man, Doctor Voodoo and some more. And those are only the canon ones.
- Combined with his Flat Character, at times it feels like the sole reason Colossus is kept around is to be a Ship Magnet for other, more lively characters. He initially had a crush on Storm (as did almost everyone under Chris Claremont's pen), but it was his romance with Kitty Pryde that became his first true relationship, and to this day it is regarded as the One True Pairing of Colossus among X-Men fans. Undeterred, Ho Yay shippers delight in pairing him off Wolverine (with whom he is Heterosexual Life-Partners with), Exodus (who he followed during his brief Face–Heel Turn in the '90s) or Deadpool (mostly because of Deadpool (2016)). On the heterosexual end, he's paired with Callisto of the Morlocks, Meggan of Excalibur, and Domino of X-Force. Executive Meddling created a character just to be his love interest, but neither she nor the random Savage Land woman he had a child with (later established as not his) stuck in shipping circles like the above have.
- For a long time (and probably to this day) Gambit has fulfilled this role in X-Men fandom, being paired with any and every character out there, regardless of whether he likes them, or whether he's even met them in the first place.
- She may very well be the most (in)famous X-Men character in this regard. Due to her status as an escapist character, she's frequently been paired up with characters in different runs. There has been quite a few writers who have admitted that Kitty was their first comic crush so it's played a factor into her love-life. note
- While not to the extent of Gambit or Nightcrawler, most forum discussions of Cyclops derail within a few hours to which of the characters he's interacted with recently he should date. The commonly appearing ships seem to be Jean, Emma, Angel, Wolverine and (on Tumblr) Captain America. The expanded list could probably expand the entire Marvel Universe.
- Teen-Scott even more so. An Adorkable, teenaged Woobie version of the guy already well know for having beautiful, talented women hanging off him, without any of Adult-Scott's baggage? You'd better believe every shipper was ready to pair him off with their current generation X-student of choice. The most popular ships appear to be Teen-Jean, Pixie, and X-23.
- Les Yay:
- Anything by Chris Claremont. Try to deny the subtext between Storm and Yukio, or Dani Moonstar and Wolfsbane, or Selene with Rachel Summers and Magma, or Kitty and Rachel, or Kitty and Illyana... Of course, he did it with guys and non Selene villains, too...
- Scarlet Witch's interactions with Jean Grey in the X-Men: First Class series were filled with these. Mind, it didn't come entirely from nowhere - right in Wanda's first appearance Jean says "that witch is too pretty."
- The looks Emma and Jean give each other in a scene from House of X issue 6 are rather... suggestive.
- Her interactions
with Kate Pryde in Marauders have been viewed this way. - Some of Illyana Rasputin's friendship moments with Kitty Pryde.
- Domino is very close with teammates Diamondback and Outlaw, making a point of telling the reader how much she loves them.
- Jubilee gets a bit of this with X-23, thanks primarily to Sana Takeda's artwork in Marjorie Liu's X-23 book. ND Stevenson confirmed her as gay in Runaways (2015), but that was an alternate universe.
- Kitty Pryde's friendships with Illyana Rasputin and/or Rachel Summers could be interpreted this way.
- Her and Storm are half this, half Mentor Ship.
- Katherine and Emma Frost in Marauders. Read it without thinking "these two need to start banging already!". It's impossible.
- Storm with Callisto, her rival for leadership of the Morlocks, and Yukio, a Japanese thief.
- Love to Hate
- Emma Frost has or might suddenly develop an antagonistic relationship with anyone who wasn't a Hellion or part of Generation X. Jean Grey, Ororo Monroe, Illyana Rasputina, Betsy Braddock, Kitty Pryde, Rachel Summers, Danielle Moonstar, Angelia Jones, even the Stepford Cuckoos who are her clone daughters, Bobby Drake, Charles Xavier, Alex Summers, Sean Cassidy, Nathan Summers and Joshua Foley have all suffered her wrath. With Frost's Heel–Face Turn, we know she's no threat to our heroes' well being, so it's easy to laugh at her unpleasantness, even at most of her past crimes.
- As of Dawn of X, Sinister is now an ally of Xavier’s and even a member of the Quiet Council Of Krakoa. He’s still every bit as duplicitous, gene-greedy, and antagonistic as he always was, put on full display in Hellions. But damn if he isn’t funny while lying, scheming, stealing, and generally trolling everyone he can.
- Magnificent Bastard: Magneto himself is a Holocaust survivor who is hellbent on seeing that no such evil ever befalls the mutants. Becoming a terrorist, Magneto manipulates his followers, allies and enemies alike, constantly waging war to better the lot of mutantkind, even against his best friend Charles Xavier. At one point Magneto even blackmails the world with nuclear weapons to set up a home for Mutants, and even foiled Doctor Doom's attempts at domination at another point. Deciding to protect the world and mutants in his own way, Magneto has returned countless times to commit acts he admits are unscrupulous, but necessary, constantly keeping himself from slipping too far into true evil while protecting his people from all threats.
- Memetic Badass: Juggernaut is renowned by fans as one of the toughest customers in the MU, and not without reason. Even all the worfings he's had to put up with haven't diminished his badass cred.
- Memetic Loser:
- In both the comics and the animated series below, Sentinels have a reputation for yielding poor returns on investment. In the comics it got to the point where Sentinels were featured in a San Francisco "mutant museum" and treated as a quaint curiosity, while as for the animated series... well, this video
sums it up. - Because he is his Alternate Company Equivalent, Quicksilver gets quite often compared to The Flash, against whom he is for the most part horribly outclassed. While there are versions of Quicksilver that are faster than some versions of the Flash and there have been times where Quicksilver has been powered up to Flash-like levels in the comics, for the most part Quicksilver on average tends to have very defined limits to his speed while the Flash is nigh-limitless in his potential for speed.
- Another reason could be his twin getting the Super Power Lottery being a vastly powerful Reality Warper while he got Super-Speed and is not even at the top of that power tier in the Marvel Universe.
- Apocalypse has been considered this in some circles due to how many times he gets beaten by weaker mutants such as Magneto, being manipulated by the Celestials and his reliance on their tech, and his relative unimportance in the grand scheme of things compared to other villains like Doctor Doom, Thanos or Ultron (for reference, those three tend to frequently menace the entire Marvel universe, while Apocalypse almost exclusively faces the X-Men and related characters). In the House of M continuity, he even cowers before Black Bolt and gets vaporized by a whisper from him. It doesn't help that he's easy to beat in X-Men vs. Street Fighter.
- The films unfortunately don't give Cyclops much room to earn respect, and combined with the 90s cartoon and its overly dramatic characterization, there's a popular assumption that he's a whiny loser. Its almost Aquaman level bad.
- In both the comics and the animated series below, Sentinels have a reputation for yielding poor returns on investment. In the comics it got to the point where Sentinels were featured in a San Francisco "mutant museum" and treated as a quaint curiosity, while as for the animated series... well, this video
- Memetic Molester: FABIAN CORTEZ. The dude is basically the X-King of bad touch.
- Memetic Mutation:
- Days of Future Past may just have the most frequently parodied cover of all time.

- Magneto/Cyclops/Emma was right! note
- There are two (in)famous '80s panelsnote where Kitty drops an n-bomb for the sake of making a point. This has turned into a running gag in some corners of the Internet about how Kitty is either secretly racist or just has a really filthy mouth.
- "Punches! From the Punch Dimension!"note
- Teen Jean is best known for her reading Bobby's mind and telling him that he's gay, effectively outing him against his will. But due to the Ass Pull aspects of the situation, and the fact that Jean had abused her powers to mind control Angel earlier, this snowballed into a joke about Jean brainwashing Bobby into being gay. Now, nearly any Jean-related comic that has come out since then (with either Teen of Adult Jean) will invariably have an edit where Jean tells people that they're gay.
- "Mag-Fuckin-Neto!"Explanation
- "X-Men! Welcome... TO DIE!!!"Explanation
- Wolverine Crush Picture from the 90s cartoon. Explanation
- Days of Future Past may just have the most frequently parodied cover of all time.
- Memetic Troll: Teen!Jean became this after the infamous moment where her time-displaced teen self (long story) read teen Bobby's mind and discovered he was gay and forcibly outed him. Now people are snarking that Jean likes to brainwash people into being gay.
- Mis-blamed: The weird way Cyclops and Emma Frost hooked up and Jean Grey dying were never Grant Morrison's intention. They had something entirely different planned out but an editorial proclamation forced them to change it at the last minute.
- Moral Event Horizon:
- Arcade crossed this in Avengers Arena, which transformed him from an Affably Evil joke villain to an unrepentant child killer. Notably, even the supervillain community was disgusted by this.
- Bishop killed innocent government soldiers, destroyed the X-Mansion, and tried to kill a baby. When Cable saved the kid, Bishop shot at Cable and mortally wounded Xavier instead; then stole a time machine and did even worse to try and kill Cable and the kid until he wiped out all life on Earth.
- Cassandra Nova sending the Sentinels to destroy Genosha. This act instantly made Nova one of the most heinous mass murderers the X-universe has ever seen, with over 16 million mutants dying because of it.
- Fabian Cortez drags his motley band of harried refugees onto Magneto's space rock doorstep, promptly pulls him out of his Heel–Face Turn and back into villainy, and then sets up a scheme to get rid of both the X-Men and Magneto himself all at once, leaving him free to claim the role of mutantkind's leader. The fact that this scheme will result in the death of his own sister doesn't bother him in the slightest, and he doesn't even spare a word for poor Anne-Marie as he flies away gloating. He'd do plenty of horrible stuff later too, but it was just gilding the lily: right here in his first story was when the dude crossed the Event Horizon, and he never once looked back.
- Magneto killing Jean Grey. Later retconned to Xorn, who himself had to become a Legacy Character for readers to buy on the team again. Magneto still has ripping out Logan's skeleton in Fatal Attractions, crucifying Charles in Eve of Destruction, and his general mistreatment of his kids and followers.
- Mystique crossed it in Dream's End (murdered Moira McTaggart and stabbed Rogue), then double downed after Xavier and Rogue forgave her during Blinded by the Light and Messiah Complex. Really, she did it much earlier, brutally murdering Carol Danvers' boyfriend while impersonating her, but that was in a Miss Marvel story rather than an X-book.
- It's hard to tell just WHERE Sabretooth crossed it, but his most heinous act involved taking in Daken and playing the role of the father that Daken (who has MAJOR daddy issues, to put it mildly) never had, all the while slowly grooming him for a confrontation with his father, resulting in his death at Wolverine's hands. Why did Sabretooth do this? Simple. He just wanted to hurt Logan at a far deeper level than he could ever manage on his own.
- Vulcan crossed it when he killed his own father, Corsair.
- Wither, whose purpose seems to be to explore how a villain becomes a villain, crossed it gradually under the influence of Selene, first murdering two policemen in New X-Men and later going all the way when he became a member of her Inner Circle during Necrosha.
- The 2005 story Deadly Genesis is infamous to this day for giving Professor X one of these. While he was already a pretty morally grey Manipulative Bastard, this story established that Xavier was willing to and did in fact recruit three rookie mutants to clean up the mess he himself made by sending his original team to the mutant island Krakoa, put those three mutants through a psychic cram-session in lieu of giving them any formal training, send those mutants to what would ultimately be their deaths, and then erase all memories from the survivors that those three mutants ever existed. Cyclops' relationship with his mentor was forever shattered because of the events of this story and it reaches Fanon Discontinuity levels among the older fans just because it's impossible to have this story as canon and at the same time see Professor Xavier as anything but irredeemable. This article
goes into greater detail on the matter.
- My Real Daddy:
- Despite being created and originally produced by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, the series suffered from low sales and never truly found its voice until Roy Thomas started writing it. Still, Chris Claremont and Dave Cockrum (and soon after, John Byrne) taking over in the 1970s if often treated as the point where the series "really" began. While it's true that Claremont didn't create the X-Men themselves, it's also true that he created many, many characters and concepts associated with them such as Rogue, Psylocke, Shadowcat, Phoenix Force, the Brood, Lockheed, the Shi'ar, the New Mutants (Magik, Sunspot, Cannonball, Karma, Cypher, Warlock, Magma, Wolfsbane, Dani Moonstar), Excalibur, Madelyne Pryor, Mr. Sinister, Gambit, the Hellfire Club, Emma Frost, Strong Guy, Rachel Summers, Forge, Mystique... you get the idea. If that weren't enough, he also was the one who made the mutants an analogy for the Civil Rights movement and brought in the themes of equality in general. Can you imagine the X-Men without any of that?
- Claremont, who created Madelyne Pryor, for a long time was the only one at Marvel who repeatedly tried to remind readers what Pryor was originally like before Inferno; i.e. in X-Men: The End (2004-2006), X-Men: Gold (2014), and X-Men: The Exterminated (2019).
- Louis Simonson gets some credit for writing what's now considered the definitive version of Archangel. Similarly, Grant Morrison is considered this for Emma Frost.
- Pre-Concrete, Paul Chadwick worked on the last few issues of Dazzler's solo book. His work on the character is well-regarded, and may have helped the character survive beyond the disco era.
- As with most female X-Men, Chris Claremont's contribution to her development as an Action Girl while she was on the team helped as well.
- Len Wein and Dave Cockrum created Storm, but it was Chris Claremont who developed the character.
- Though Stan Lee and Jack Kirby first told his tale, it was Chris Claremont who first told Magneto's side of the story, explaining his tragic childhood, his complex motivations, and his three-dimensional nature, rather than treating him as just another generic comic book villain.
- Cullen Bunn has quickly entered this status for modern writers. His take on Magneto as a ruthlessly pragmatic anti-hero coming close at times to being a mutant version of The Punisher is seen as a great evolution for the character.
- Glob Herman was originally created by Grant Morrison as one of Kid Omega's thugs in New X-Men. However, it wasn't until Spider-Man and the X-Men, under writer Elliott Kalan, where Glob showed any redeemable traits beyond "stupid bully." This was in 2014, over a decade after his debut. Ed Brisson took this character development and ran with it, giving Glob a more sincere sadsack personality and focus in books such as Old Man Logan, Dead Man Logan, Age of X-Man: Nextgen, and New Mutants (2019), leading to him becoming by far the writer most synonymous with the character.
- Guido Carosella was originally created by Chris Claremont as Lila Cheney's bodyguard who didn't have much characterization other than being big and strong and having a heavy New York accent. Under Peter David's X-Factor, he took on the codename Strong Guy and his character developed into the character he's known as today: a Deadpan Snarker, Stepford Smiler, and Sad Clown who's nonetheless a dedicated and loyal friend and teammate. David is also responsible for elaborating on his powers beyond just being strong, along with his backstory. And the accent was mostly dropped.
- Despite being created and originally produced by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, the series suffered from low sales and never truly found its voice until Roy Thomas started writing it. Still, Chris Claremont and Dave Cockrum (and soon after, John Byrne) taking over in the 1970s if often treated as the point where the series "really" began. While it's true that Claremont didn't create the X-Men themselves, it's also true that he created many, many characters and concepts associated with them such as Rogue, Psylocke, Shadowcat, Phoenix Force, the Brood, Lockheed, the Shi'ar, the New Mutants (Magik, Sunspot, Cannonball, Karma, Cypher, Warlock, Magma, Wolfsbane, Dani Moonstar), Excalibur, Madelyne Pryor, Mr. Sinister, Gambit, the Hellfire Club, Emma Frost, Strong Guy, Rachel Summers, Forge, Mystique... you get the idea. If that weren't enough, he also was the one who made the mutants an analogy for the Civil Rights movement and brought in the themes of equality in general. Can you imagine the X-Men without any of that?
- Narm Charm:
- The existence of Master Mold, a giant Sentinel who spawns 'smaller' Sentinels from his tummy. Yes, he has the power of robot pregnancy. Doesn't make him any less threatening however.
- There's also Sauron, one of the X-Men's oldest villains and definitely their campiest. He's like a walking example of why people read comics — deep and complex stories are fine, but sometimes you just want to check your brain at the door and read about people in silly costumes being menaced by a hypnotic vampiric were-pterodactyl dinosaur man.
- Never Live It Down:
- Canonically, thanks to the retcon that the "Jean Grey" of the Phoenix/Dark Phoenix Saga was actually the Phoenix Force itself (though the Teen Jean's comic has put that somewhat in doubt), she's only truly died once: near the end of New X-Men when Xorn kills her with a planetary-sized stroke. She came back very briefly in Phoenix - Endsong but by the end of that story she had essentially become one with the Phoenix Force. Doesn't stop most fans from assuming that her history is one long string of death and resurrection however. Maybe it's the name. Even Jean's not to keen on the whole death and resurrection thing if Uncanny X-Men #281 is taken into account.Jean: If I come back from the dead one more time, I'll seriously be in danger of turning into a walking cliche.
- Fun fact - on This Very Wiki, the trope used to be named "Jean Grey Escalation", in reference to the above phenomenon. The trope was renamed because people kept misusing it as a synonym for Death Is Cheap, proving the point.
- Scott can never take a break for his screw-ups that the writers had piled on him, which is the usual ammunition of his haters in favor of his clawed rival. Please note that most, if not all of these, are actually proven false or at least not as black and white by the context of the story.
- Abandoning his wife Madelyne Pryor and son Nathan Summers to be with the resurrected Jean Grey. Fans ignore that: he never intended to leave to reunite with Jean, he only wanted to confirm whether she was alive and Madelyne - who didn't even know why Angel needed to see him urgently - told him it was over if he walked out of their home's door; after confirming Jean was alive he meant to go back, even though X-Factor needed his leadership, but Madelyne had disappeared for then; he only got back together with Jean several months later when he thought Maddie was dead, and it was Jean who started it. And regarding Nathan, Cyclops actually spent twelve years in a hellish future raising him, which proves how far he's willing to for his son.
- Being in some kind of a psychic love affair with Emma while married to Jean, and later making out on her grave. Though opinions vary on how bad this is, since Emma claims it's therapy, and the two don't become actual lovers until after Jean's death (whose ghost pushed Scott and Emma together). Keep in mind that Emma being his therapist means that she takes advantage of Scott's vulnerable state and her own psychic powers to basically force him into the affair, that Jean herself was willing to have an affair with Logan shortly before Scott cheated on her, and finally, that Cyclops had to be psychically forced by Jean into starting a relationship with Emma after Jean died in order to prevent an apocalyptic future (which is what leads to the grave-makeout scene). In short, not only was he -nearly- cheated on, abused and brainwashed into a relationship with his abuser, he also gets all the bad rap for all that.
- Killing Charles Xavier during a psychotic rampage... when he was possessed by the Dark Phoenix. Other characters like Jean Grey, Charles Xavier and Scarlet Witch get a free pass for their terrible actions committed whilst possessed; he doesn't get the same privilege.
- Rogue throwing a helpless Carol Danvers off a bridge is something the X-Men comic books wouldn't let you forget for a decade, and readers of those comic books wouldn't let you forget for years after that. Then Carol starred in her own solo series again, got a major push over the X-Ladies(and Sue Storm) due to movie rights issues and her movie became a box office success, ensuring ever more comic books periodically reminding readers of Rogue's most famous crime. Nevermind several worse villains than Rogue like Magneto, Emma Frost, the Mastermind sisters, Sabretooth and Vulcan have also joined an X-Team or five and Rogue is one of the few who has been fully rehabilitated. Rogue's fought or at least been attacked by Carol Danvers, living memories of Danvers and Danvers alternates more than actual villains created to face Rogue like Vargas, and Carol Danvers has fought Rogue or villains meant to invoke Rogue more than she has Mystique, who tormented her before Rogue and pit Rogue against Danvers to begin with.
- Gambit, while he was always an Anti-Hero, actually only betrayed the X-Men once, when he decided to go and join Apocalypse thinking that it could help mutants and that he could retain his personality after becoming a Horseman. He was wrong. When he returned to normal, he returned to the good side as well. Yet people seem to think that he betrayed everyone and their mother more times than you can count.
- He also covered up his involvement in the massacre of the Morlocks; he was tricked into that and had no idea it would happen, but it's easy to see why he wouldn't exactly be trusted.
- It might be surprising to a lot of people only familiar with the adaptations that Magneto hasn't actually been a villain in over a decade, unless you count his turn in Morrison's run, in which he was either a victim of Demonic Possession, an impostor, or both, depending on which Retcon you believe.
- Nightcrawler's faith. It was never intended as a major aspect of his character, in fact most of the time he wasn't even all that religious, but in the hands of some less-than-talented writers like Chuck Austen, it's like he exists to be the token Christian, only for a change of writers to result in this being ignored or downplayed again. Similarly, Northstar's sexuality. Him being gay, other than making him one of the most well known gay superheroes, isn't really that big of a deal to his character at large. His personality doesn't hinder on the fact he's gay. Yet, in the hands of Chuck Austen, it's like all that matters is that he's gay.
- Emma Frost gets a buttload of this due to the fact that she manipulated and essentially raped Scott and got away with it by starting a relationship with him after Jean's death. The fact that she is his therapist just made her into more of a colossal bitch. This is somewhat in-universe at well: Rachel Summers never forgave her for having an affair with Scott, although thankfully she never learns of the whole story. It should be noted, however, that her actions were (possibly) influenced by Cassandra Nova at the time. On the otherhand, this isn't even the worst thing she's ever done, beofre or after her Heel–Face Turn.
- Scarlet Witch's actions in Disassembled and House of M. The popularity of those two storylines, along with her absence from the comics between 2005 to 2011, means that it's common for readers to think of her as an omnipotent Reality Warper, even though her powers don't work that way anywhere except Disassembled and House of M, and both those stories have since been explained away as the result of an outside source amping up her powers. It even affects writers at times—AXIS has her at reality warping status again.
- In X-Men #3, Xavier infamously admits that Jean is “the one I love! But I can never tell her! I have no right! Not while I’m the leader of the X-Men, and confined to this wheelchair”. Stan Lee must have realized right away how controversial this plotline would have been, because he never referenced it again, but neither readers nor writers ever forgot, to the point of it being revisited three decades later during the Onslaught story.
- The chances of people ever letting the "Wooden Gun" thing go for Magneto are pretty slim.
- Canonically, thanks to the retcon that the "Jean Grey" of the Phoenix/Dark Phoenix Saga was actually the Phoenix Force itself (though the Teen Jean's comic has put that somewhat in doubt), she's only truly died once: near the end of New X-Men when Xorn kills her with a planetary-sized stroke. She came back very briefly in Phoenix - Endsong but by the end of that story she had essentially become one with the Phoenix Force. Doesn't stop most fans from assuming that her history is one long string of death and resurrection however. Maybe it's the name. Even Jean's not to keen on the whole death and resurrection thing if Uncanny X-Men #281 is taken into account.
- Newer Than They Think:
- Magneto's tragic backstory as a Holocaust survivor is the character's defining aspect now, yet it was first established in 1981, eighteen years after he was introduced. In fact, the issue, "I, Magneto...." was a radical reinvention of the character, who had mostly been a one-note evil megalomaniac until that point. The new direction stuck so well that nearly every adaptation uses his revised backstory, and he's been portrayed as varying flavors of antihero since then.
- Though they debuted as his henchmen, Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch weren't revealed to be his children until 1987, over two decades after their first appearance. Before Chris Claremont's Retcon, they were intended to be the children of the Whizzer and Miss America.
- Downplayed example, since it still happened in the book's first year, but would you believe the anti-mutant prejudice itself? Yeah, Stan Lee didn't actually introduce that until issue 8. Before that the X-Men were beloved celebrities, to the point where they have to hide from throngs of adoring fans.
- Older Than They Think: Blink has always been canonically Bahamian, but because of her pink skin (and portrayal by not one, but two Asian actresses in live-action) many have forgotten as much. So when Saladin Ahmed and Javier Rodriguez's Exiles run portrayed her with black features, a vocal minority of readers took issue with it, acting as though it were an act of Political Overcorrectness when it really wasn't. Ahmed himself pointed this out on his Twitter feed
. - One True Pairing: While Colossus is shipped with many characters, his relationship with Kitty Pryde is regarded as the OTP by a large segment of fans, particularly those fans who grew up reading Uncanny X-Men in the '80s.
- Overshadowed by Controversy:
- There was controversy in X-Factor over Monet's skin being whitened, which many fans called out as a Race Lift. In 2006 X-Factor vol 3 issue 4, the letters page shows a fan inquiring to Peter David about it and he responds that what her skin should be is confusing, but notes that she did have dark skin and they would likely darken her a bit. On his website in 2010, another fan inquired about it and he responded that even though she was progressively being darkened, he was still getting fan complaints asking why she was white.
- Years after X-Factor ended, David Yardin, who did many of the covers stated that Monet was getting many shades lighter than her original look, and as such he made sure she had dark skin on the covers he did
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- Years after X-Factor ended, David Yardin, who did many of the covers stated that Monet was getting many shades lighter than her original look, and as such he made sure she had dark skin on the covers he did
- There was controversy in X-Factor over Monet's skin being whitened, which many fans called out as a Race Lift. In 2006 X-Factor vol 3 issue 4, the letters page shows a fan inquiring to Peter David about it and he responds that what her skin should be is confusing, but notes that she did have dark skin and they would likely darken her a bit. On his website in 2010, another fan inquired about it and he responded that even though she was progressively being darkened, he was still getting fan complaints asking why she was white.
- Pandering to the Base:
- For whatever reason, the half of X-Men fandom's Broken Base that favors Wolverine finds themselves buttered up a lot more than the side that wants him to go away. Any issue with a lineup of X-Men will usually feature Wolverine will be front and center. There was even a cartoon series called Wolverine and the X-Men (2009), where the X-Men got second billing. The first three X-Men films (especially the third one) are arguably more like Wolverine films than X-Men films.
- Another card-related case was the tie-in Top Trumps-like card game for the third film. Each card had four traits, Speed, Strength, Fighting Ability, and Intelligence, each ranking one to seven. Most characters had about two for two of the traits, a four for one more, and six or seven (e.g., Angel had lower traits for the latter three, but a six in speed, while Mystique had low for all but fighting skills and intelligence, and Colossus excelled at strength). Logan had six or seven for every trait. He's apparently a better fighter than Mystique (which as the first X-Men movie showed was not the case), faster than Angel, stronger than Colossus, and smarter than Doctor Doom.
- Storm's divorce from Black Panther following the end of the Avengers vs. X-Men event is widely seen as a present to the vocal detractors of the pairing.
- Poor Man's Substitute: Originally Magneto was this to Doctor Doom:
- He began as a Jack Kirby-fashioned Eurotrash Supervillain who dresses in an outfit that's a mix of The Dark Ages (that weird helmet with a horn sigil on top) and modern pulp (complete with a cape and what looks like underwear outside his leotard), who also has a rivalry with the main team leader (Doom and Richards/Magneto and Xavier). Of course where even the Kirby-Lee Doom had charisma, cool, guile and had legitimate Evil Virtues, Lee-Kirby Magneto was just an obnoxious asshole.
- Chris Claremont's revisions of Magneto, have made him even more Doom-Like, such as also coming from a community targeted for genocide by the Nazis (Doom is Romani, while Magneto is Jewish), becoming a head of state (Latveria for Doom, Genosha for Magneto). John Byrne opposed Claremont's plans to turn Magneto sympathetic and described Claremont's retcons as turning Magneto into "a half-assed clone of Doom". Of course the differences are more pronounced in that Doom is scarred and ugly and has a face-mask while Magneto is a Pretty Boy and a ladies' man). Magneto has a much more romantic angle to him than Doom does.
- In Ultimate Marvel, Magneto usurps Doom's function as the primary Marvel-wide villain and boasts most of the focus in cross-overs whereas Magneto in mainstream Marvel rarely plays a big role as compared to Doctor Doom, Ultron or Thanos.
- Questionable Casting: Some fans are divided on the casting of Channing Tatum for the upcoming Gambit film... which languishes in Development Hell in any case.
- Rescued from the Scrappy Heap:
- Ironically, Wolverine was widely hated when he first debuted, so much that the creative team seriously considered killing him off. He was only spared in favor of Thunderbird due to the fact that a Healing Factor and Wolverine Claws powerset was very unique at the time. After some character expansion and a Moment of Awesome, Wolverine became so popular that he's now the face of the X-Men. Though he's become a Base-Breaking Character since then, partly because his popularity got taken a bit too far...
- Madelyne Pryor is an accidental example of this. Back in 1989, Marvel intentionally wanted readers to hate Pryor to make it easy to kill her off and Ret-Gone her into an Un-person, and so turned her into a thoroughly-psychotic Woman Scorned who attempted to sacrifice her own son to fuel a demon invasion. For several years, it all worked and Madelyne Pryor was thoroughly hated. Meta circumstances have since turned that around somewhat. With advent of the Information Age (such as websites, like this very one), and Marvel making it easy to read all of Madelyne's pre-1989 appearances via reprints and digital archives (when she was a spunky, independent pilot and a helpful ally to the X-Men), a large amount of the fandom reinterpreted Madelyne as someone who actually got a raw deal, and Cyclops as being entirely too callous towards his wife. And now over the years, Marvel's handling of Jean Grey and Cyclops constantly angers fans and shippers. So lately the hatedom towards Pryor seems mostly silent, while her advocates/apologists seem pretty vocal.
- Prior to X-Men: First Class, Azazel was one of the most unpopular of all the X-Men villains. Now, he's... well, still unpopular, at least in his original incarnation, but his adaptation has fared rather a bit better in reception.
- Onslaught quickly became one of the most hated X-Men villains due to how hard Marvel tried to push his Crisis Crossover. However, his role as the epic Final Boss in Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes actually helped improve his reception among some fans. Although there are still some who just can't forget all the massive Executive Meddling involved in his creation.
- Ironically in an attempt to make him The Scrappy, Cyclops became this. While never quite hated, he was often considered a generic leader and not as interesting as Wolverine with a handful of Never Live It Down moments, and never got the kind of drastic developments the other founding members of the team did, be it in characterization, appearance or super powers, unless you count Xavier, but as Cyclops became more extreme in his actions, many began agreeing with him and considering the rest of the X-Men hypocritical for going against him. Now, even implying he's wrong is practically heresy and Marvel's continued attempts to paint him as a villain is met with bitter contention.
- Apocalypse. For many who feel he was a Generic Doomsday Villain, Dawn of X and X of Swords gave him a more clear motivation and backstory that made his Social Darwinist status more sympathetic.
- Romantic Plot Tumor: The Wolverine/Jean/Cyclops love triangle. While fans tend to ship any combination of the three, many dislike the way that the triangle essentially just makes Wolverine and Cyclops act like dicks to each other while Jean condescends them for fighting while actively fueling said fighting. Even worse given the fact that, despite editorial efforts to keep Jean dead, the two boys continued fighting over her.
- Ron the Death Eater: Cyclops may not be perfect and he makes his share of mistakes, but as an A-List superhero team leader, that's bound to happen. However, as far as some superheroes, Supervillains, writers, fans or professional alike, are concerned, he's the most despicable person on the planet. Despite being brainwashed at the time, people are blaming him and solely him for the state mutants are post-Avengers vs X-Men, despite mutants always being in this kind of situation. Then there's the fans who complain about the fact he blames Wolverine and the Avengers, or the dark Phoenix, instead of accepting blame himself... despite the fact that he still accepted responsibility, and is the only one in the mess who's accepted any blame in the whole mess (except for Captain America, who at least admits he hasn't done enough to help mutants), while the opposing side hasn't and continue to blame him for everything.
- Rooting for the Empire:
- A not-insignificant portion of the fandom reads entirely for the bad guys, even knowing Status Quo Is God in this medium. The fact that the X-Men seem to suffer from perpetual Genre Blindness, trucking on with their doomed mission despite very obviously living in a Crapsack World, makes it hard for some not to root for the more Visionary Villain antagonists like Magneto, Exodus or, later, Cyclops/Emma. The general idea here is "they might be bad guys, but at least their hands aren't permanently attached to the Idiot Ball."
- The anti-mutant human villains also have their fans. Bolivar Trask, Stephen Lang, William Stryker and the Genoshans (among others) are certainly zealous in their anti-mutantism, but recalling how often mutant supervillains have nearly destroyed the world, and how woefully insufficient existing government efforts to police them always prove, it makes a certain amount of sense to at least some readers that non-powered humans who don't want to end up marginalized on their own planet should resort to extreme measures to curb them. It probably also helps that these guys tend to dress in cool military uniforms rather than garish superhero/supervillain suits, and further that they have to be pretty damn brave and competent to go up against major super-people armed only or mostly with largely mundane weapons, and still pose a threat to them.
- Many have supported Magneto over the X-Men, seeing that no matter what they do, including saving all life on Earth on a number of occasions, mutants are still just as hated and oppressed with no signs of change. It doesn't hurt that he's often a charming, Affably Evil, and extremely sympathetic character.
- Running the Asylum: Oh yeah. The X-Men were Marvel's headline property throughout The '80s and '90s, a significant portion of the writer's room grew up reading them during that time, and hoo boy does it show, through moves such as the original roster of X-Force reuniting and the Age of Apocalypse being dragged out of mothballs in 2012. Schism and the subsequent Cyclops/Wolverine conflict is probably the apex of this, as writers who have hated Scotty since X-Factor got to have the entire world dump on him while elevating their favorite character to what they saw as his rightful place at the head of the X-Men.
- The Scrappy:
- Quentin Quire started off as a minor character, basically the super-powered mutant equivalent of a school shooter and a teenaged sociopath who manipulated others into joining a small cult of wannabe Magnetos, before dying of a drug overdose of sorts. He was revived a few times, before finally returning during Schism, serving as one source of the conflict between Wolverine and Cyclops to push them apart further, before joining Wolverine's school. He's continued to be written by Jason Aaron, who's since then made him one of the main characters, including being the main student, of his run, with him being at the front of every big event he writes, including his future self being the Phoenix in Battle of the Atom. All of this, despite being largely loathed by fandom. Every writer tends to have one kid they push, and usually it works. This case, however, it most certainly has not, and isn't helped by his continued use.
- Flip-flopped with Madelyne Pryor, who seemed to have been the most vehemently hated character among the X-Men fandom for many years after 1989. The attitude had already begun shifting before Morrison's run, when fans started to accept reinterpreting Cyclops as having more culpability than initial reactions suggested. And then after Cyclops and Jean Grey were broken up and Grey killed off again, and Emma Frost hooked up with Cyclops, the hatedom towards Pryor seemed to abruptly wither and then die with a whimper.
- Azazel was this for a real long time, being featured in the infamous "The Draco" story which is widely considered to be one of the worst X-Men stories of all time. It took being adapted into X-Men: First Class in an almost completely-reimagined form for him to get some semblance of Rescued from the Scrappy Heap.
- Onslaught is quite infamous among fans for being one of the most blatant Executive Meddling-forced comic-book villains ever, up to the point where mentioning him in certain circles of the fanbase is a bit of a Berserk Button. Besides that, he's extremely generic and has little plot significance outside of Crisis Crossovers.
- Matthew Malloy, a Generic Doomsday Villain created by... uh, let's go with polarizing writer Brian Michael Bendis. It didn't help that he effortlessly killed the extremely powerful Exodus, one of the few well-regarded '90s X-villains.
- Also the Apocalypse Twins, a pair of evil mutants introduced in Uncanny Avengers who look like dollar-bin refugees from Guilty Gear and narratively speaking, are the unholy fusion of Holocaust and the Fenris Twins.
- Ship-to-Ship Combat:
- Fandom is divided into those who think Rogue must be with Gambit and those who think that no matter who they themselves favor, anyone is preferable to Remy as Rogue's love interest. The same goes for Magneto, who was Promoted to Love Interest for Rogue after the Rogue/Gambit ship hit a big rock (namely, Gambit's chicanery with the Marauders being revealed).
- Interestingly, Remy/Rogue wasn't even the original endgame. Chris Claremont created Gambit as Storm's love interest and planned on having a shock reveal where Storm would ultimately find out that Gambit was really arch-villain Mr. Sinister, in a new body designed to further torment the X-Men.
- Take that and toss in Scott/Jean/Wolverine and Scott/Jean/Emma Frost; the former (Jean and Wolverine hooking up) was teased at the start of the Casey/Morrison run but fans were so overwhelmingly negative that Morrison ended up going with Emma/Scott, which did not go over well and led to later writers going with Cyclops/Emma Frost/Namor, as far as retconning a relationship with Namor into Emma's past to pander to fans who HATE the Scott/Emma pairing.
- In addition to Wolverine/Jean, there are Wolverine/Mariko and Wolverine/Storm ships as well.
- Where to even start? Cyke/Jean vs. Cyke/Emma is probably the biggest battle in the fan base, the former being iconic while the latter some fans find far more interesting, and still others remember him fondly with Madelyne Pryor. That's not even getting into Ho Yay with Angel and, of course, Wolverine. Now there's also the fact that some writers have decided that the Phoenix Force itself wants him. Then of course is Mr. Sinister, who has long displayed an unhealthy obsession with Cyclops within the books leading to quite a bit of subtext among fans. More recently, Uncanny has seen Tempus, Maria Hill and even Magik enter the fray. And that's not even including Teen!Scott in All-New, who is popularly linked both with the obligatory Jean Grey (in this case time-displaced O5 Teen!Jeen) and, thanks to Rule 63 giving the fanbase an outlet for Adult!Scott's subtext with Logan, X-23.
- Jean/Scott Vs. Jean/Logan as well as Jean/Scott Vs. Emma/Scott. Also Teen!Jean/Teen!Scott vs. X-23/Teen!Scott.
- Squick: In Wolverine and the X-Men (Marvel Comics), Kitty Pryde's somehow being impregnated by Brood eggs that infect her uterus. Just for the record, impregnating someone against their will? That sounds like a rape, and one cover showing them all swarming around her as she's pinned down by them does not help with that.
- Strangled by the Red String:
- Some fans think this way about Scott dating Emma Frost. Some even like to believe that Joe Quesada (well-known for his dislike of characters being married) forced Grant Morrison to drop a bridge on Jean Grey, because they don't want to believe that Morrison came up with something like this on their own. (As a matter of fact, no X-Men writer ever had a freer hand what to do with them.) What's really bad is the excuse given for why they're dating so soon after that is "not" a rebound relationship (Morrison had them have an adulterous psychic affair before Jean's death, but realistically that was Emma — his supposed therapist — unethically taking advantage of him when he was vulnerable.) As proof it was contrived, there is this Bad Future that Jean needed to avert. Going back in time, like every other such future, somehow wasn't an option. Instead the only options were: 1. Scott and Emma didn't get together, the X-Men would fall apart and things go all to holy hell. 2. Jean brainwashes her husband into forgetting his feelings for Jean and giving in to his attraction to Emma.
- Most fans regard Black Panther and Storm's marriage as something akin to this. Many of those who were interested in the idea were annoyed at Reginald Hudlin's hamfisted railroading of the relationship from casual acquaintance two cameos in Christopher Priest's run where their "romance" was treated as an unrealistic-but-cathartic childhood fantasy that would never actually work in any real way, and included Storm explicitly comparing Panther to Magneto, to "Wedding of Perfect Couple" as soon as possible, especially since they were made out as some kind of "First Couple of Black Superheroes." This was either alleviated or exacerbated (depending on your point of view) by the Storm flashback miniseries which came out around the same time and retconned the aforementioned two-issue cameo crossover to establish that Storm and T'Challa did have an earlier romantic relationship when they were teenagers. Subsequent writers were not subtle about their distaste for the pairing, and found any possible reason to have Storm go on missions with the X-Men or for T'Challa to have solo adventures. After the events of the X-Men vs. Avengers, where the two fought, their marriage has been annulled.
- Bobby Drake/Iceman and Kitty Pryde/Shadowcat seem to be falling into this trope. As of the seventh issue of the Wolverine and the X-Men comic, Bobby and Kitty have shared two kisses, despite the fact that they've spent years as distant acquaintances at best. They had a decent relationship arc in the Ultimate Marvel universe, and writers have been known to mix the two up before. It comes completely out of nowhere in the main Marvel Universe.
- The Magneto/Rogue ship has always been one of the weirder X-relationships, being pushed every couple of years by the Powers That Be despite it never really picking up steam until Gambit's popularity as a character waned, and it was also made canon in the Age of Apocalypse.
- Piotr's twice been strangled by this. During the Secret Wars (1984) event, Executive Meddling on the part of Jim Shooter (who wasn't comfortable with the jailbaity aspects of 19-20 year old Colossus romancing a 14 year old Kitty) forced Colossus to fall into instant love with Zsaji, a character specifically created for the event. While Zsaji succeeded in putting off the Colossus/Kitty relationship until both characters were of age, it was not received well by fans and Zsaji has barely appeared since the '80s. In a more recent case, he sparked a relationship with Domino out of nowhere in the pages of Cable and X-Force, noteworthy for splitting both characters off from their usual OTPs. This one was a little more popular, resulting in a Broken Base, but it didn't last long and Colossus soon returned to romancing Kitty... only to be left at the altar.
- Kitty Pryde With Piotr. If X-Men: Gold was clumsy in its attempt to bring them together, it was vicious in how it tried to keep them apart. Kitty Pryde, after apparently having enough time to think about marrying Piotr that she proposed herself, completely falls apart after a few lines from the minister of the actual ceremony celebrating how much they've overcome, panics and calls the whole thing off.
- Most fans seem to think that Nightcrawler's romance with Rachel Summers in X-Men: Gold comes out of nowhere. Not helped by the fact that they barely interact or spend any significant time together.
- Psylocke with Fantomex in Uncanny X-Force (2013). Later turns out to be invoked. Fantomex knew Psylocke didn't really have feelings for him, but he had to make her question her devotion to Warren in order to acquire the courage needed to kill him.
- Sabretooth's two major love interests can be seen as this.
- Mystique. They hated and did terrible things to each other throughout the 90's and early 2000's. Come Jason Aaron's 2010 X-run, they were an affectionate couple, captioned in Wolverine #300 as "Marvel's Hottest and Deadliest New Couple". Since then, Sabretooth has been depicted as loving her and anyone harming her instant presses his Berserk Button.
- Monet. After Secret Wars, the books have an 8-month time-skip with many off-panel developments, which includes the start of this romance in Bunn's Uncanny X-Men. The Ship Tease is in full effect the first issue as they engage in Snark-to-Snark Combat. Psylocke reveals it's typical behavior by asking if they were still bickering, why they don't just Get a Room!, and thinking they may be flirting. The seeds of romance were planted asap. Bunn confirmed they had a torturous love
and their feelings were so apparent, six characters could see it throughout the two books they shared. Yuriko has an exposition moment in Weapon X 22 when her elaboration on Monet was "as in Sabretooth's ex-girlfriend."
◊ Domino, Deadpool, and Omega Red shipped them. Domino gushes at them twice, Deadpool impatiently asks when they're gonna kiss, and Omega Red grins at them during a heartfelt convo. She and Creed never met prior to all this and we skipped straight to them already being in love with numerous sources pointing it out. note note
- Strawman Has a Point:
- In general, anti-mutant sentiments are used to make points about real-life prejudices with the heroic X-Men proving that the hatred and fear of mutants is misplaced at best and far more often painted as extremely harmful bigotry. The problem is, mutants genuinely do have special powers that make them different from the people around them and these powers are often dangerous.note There is a legitimate reason to be wary of mutants when hostile mutants can do a lot of damage to ordinary people and even benevolent mutants can cause significant harm if they don't control their powers properly, but this is almost never acknowledged.
- Very often it seems like is Magneto was right arguing that peaceful co-existence between humans and mutants is impossible, considering that no matter what the X-Men do, the plot never seems to get any closer to reaching that, particularly because people in the Marvel Universe are Too Dumb to Live and suffer from Aesop Amnesia regarding that theme. It gets even worse that in many stories throughout the Marvel Universe, especially in recent years, they seem willing to easily sacrifice any and all of their freedoms at a moment's notice, so quite often it would seem like the world would be better if the X-Men let Magneto Take Over the World, since at least he doesn't go making the Green Goblin the most powerful man in America.
- Robert Kelly's arguments (such as comparing mutant registration to gun control) actually made sense to some readers and viewers. Then they turned an otherwise logical argument into an anvilicious allegory to McCarthyism when they had the senator hold up a "list of names of identified mutants", shifting the argument from "Some mutants are dangerous" to "All mutants are dangerous." Of course, once the killer mutant-seeking robots come in (and they always do), it seems clear that Kelly is Jumping Off the Slippery Slope, even if his arguments do have a grain of truth to them.
- Theme Pairing: Thor/Storm has a substantial following due to the fact that both of them are associated with the weather, spurred on by the fact that they are a couple in the spin-off Marvel Adventures universe. Images like this
◊note just encourages comments like "Bring on the biracial thunder babies". - They Wasted a Perfectly Good Character:
- Killing off all of Rachel's relatives in The End of The Greys felt like a cop-out, given how it would have been nice seeing survivors struggling to cope with the trauma and confusion with her. At the very least, it would have been satisfying to see the twins Joey and Gailyn (who have mutant powers that had yet to be developed or demonstrated to their full potential on page) survive to join their cousin on a quest for revenge.
- Plenty of the characters wiped out in the aftermath of M-Day, but Wallflower and DJ are notable examples with fascinating powers and interesting personalities who feel like the writers gave up on them too fast and decided they should be killed off (leather than keep navigating the new world and helping the heroes (a feeling which may have led to their belated resurrection over a decade later).
- Angel's girlfriend Candy Southern is decently cute with him, and is even hinted to be a mutant (or at least descended from one) due to the first appearance of the Hellfire Club mentioning that Candy was a hereditary Hellfire Club member who was creeped out by them and didn't join. But any potential mutant heritage on her part is never explored and in about two decades of appearances she's little more than a Satellite Love Interest and part-time Mission Control figure, and then is killed off for Collateral Angst.
- Scaleface of the Tunnelers is popular for shapeshifting into a dragon, being her group's Only Sane Man, and forming a Battle Couple with her teammate Berzerker. She is killed in her debut issue and only returns as a resurrected minion for various villains.
- Jean herself has been subjected to this in many storylines where she is reduced to just the love interest of either Wolverine or Cyclops with no agency or development of her own. Looking at you, X-Men Film Series.
- In The Tomb of Dracula Crossover, Rachel's status as a Badass Normal Hunter of Monsters who isn't prejudiced against mutants could have given her interesting dynamics with the X-Men if they'd teamed up. Instead, she's turned into a vampire by Dracula and placed under his thrall before she even meets any of the X-Men.
- They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot:
- The 'Last Will and Testament of Charles Xavier' story featured a brief, throwaway appearance by Exodus as an agent of SHIELD and the head of its psi division. Yes, Exodus. And the thing is, exploring how a character like Exodus would come to work for SHIELD at all, let alone go so far as to help an organization primarily made up of humans hunt down a dangerous mutant threat, would be a story seriously worth reading. Unfortunately, though, Bennet was just there to get worfed by Bendis's Generic Doomsday Villain Matthew Malloy and he played no further part in the rest of the story, which was so bad that it ended up being retconned.
- The '90s are pretty much a landfill of these, thanks to the high creator turnover and endless backstage politics going on at the time. A lot of villains from the era (indeed, entire villain teams fall under this umbrella) had massive potential but thanks to poor writing are barely remembered today (The Acolytes, the Upstarts, the Externals, etc). There's also the characters that never even got a chance to show their stuff, like Adrienne Frost, Genesis and Haven. If you ever wondering why the segment of the fandom that's Nineties-centric just tunes out of the current Cyclops VS Wolverine rigmarole altogether, well, this is why.
- As a result of Jimmy Hudson's memory loss, he never remembered Ultimate Magneto during his stay in X-Men Blue, and then never confronted 616 Magneto with the actions of his interdimensional duplicate.
- Too Oblique, Stopped Caring: Following writer Chris Claremont's departure from the franchise in the early 90s, other writers tried their hands at creating mysterious, wide-reaching plots in the same vein as Claremont. However, so many of these plots were launched that the Kudzu Plot that they left behind tarnished the franchise through the rest of the 90s — Who would betray the X-Men, Kwannon and Psylocke, the third Summers brother, who was Onslaught and so many more.
- Ugly Cute: People in-universe generally react in horror to his demonic appearance. However, Kurt has more then his fair share of admirers due to his charming personality and art often making him look like a Cute Monster Boy rather than scary.
- Ukefication: Gambit is a popular target of this in Slash Fic for the fandom, going from a suave and confident lady's man to weepy and helpless without his lover.
- Unintentionally Sympathetic:
- In Wolverines #20, where Mystique is presented with the choice of resurrecting Wolverine in the place of her lover Destiny or seeing all existence destroyed and decides she would rather "let it burn" than bring Wolverine back. While this is presented as yet another example of Raven's self-centered egotism (she thinks to herself that this is her story, not his), it really does set her up as a sort of cosmic chew toy presented with the ultimate sadistic choice as even a hero as pure as Spider-Man would struggle to willingly resurrect their worst enemy (Wolverine had murdered Mystique by this time) in the place of the person they love most just Because Destiny Says So.
- While Scott used to bounce back and forth between this and Unintentionally Unsympathetic Depending on the Writer, as of the new 10s, he is firmly stuck on this, mostly because certain writers (most prominently Jason Aaron) tried their utmost to vilify without bringing up any actual valid points against him. For example, they tried to portray him as bad for dragging children into the conflict, when training mutant kids and preparing them for a world that hates them has been the X-Men's concept from the very beginning.
- From 2006 onwards, Cyclops: learned that his father figure had lied to and betrayed him; was forced to fight a brother he never even knew he had; lost the love of his life; had his oldest and closest friends abandon him; killed said father figure while possessed and arguably in self-defense, and was treated as a cold blooded, remorseless murderer for it despite his obvious guilt; and essentially had his entire legacy stripped away and everything he ever worked for handed over on a silver platter to a guy whose only apparent qualification was being just so cool. Even fans who disliked the character started to feel sorry for him because Marvel had so systematically tried to destroy the poor bastard that it was basically impossible not to. It didn’t help that many of the people opposing him (Scarlet Witch, Iron Man, Black Bolt, etc.) had previously done or were currently doing things as bad or worse than him and gotten a free pass, making it look like he was being singled out rather than getting what was coming to him.
- Unintentionally Unsympathetic:
- In rough order of severity and depending on the writer, Kitty Pryde, Cyclops, Professor X, Magneto, Emma Frost, and Wolverine. Logan especially, considering that he's been used for Jerkass Has a Point moments too many times that whenever he criticizes anyone for their behavior, he's almost undoubtedly done the exact thing he's condemning. At this point, being a giant hypocrite is slowly becoming a character trait for Logan.
- What makes Wolverine such a frustrating example of this trope is that the character is basically a Karma Houdini on wheels — other Marvel U Anti-Hero characters like The Punisher, Agent Venom, and in the X-Universe Magneto and most pointedly Cyclops, all suffer the consequences of their Jerkass behavior through generous doses of Can't Get Away with Nuthin', etc. Logan is a character with a body count behind him that would make most Serial Killer characters blush yet enjoys is Loved by All and is regarded as a trusted ally of characters like Captain America, Spider-Man, etc... you know, the same people who would be calling for him to stand trial if he were anyone else. In general, both the character and the narrative bend over backwards to handwave Wolverine's crimes. At one point Logan even says himself that he's only ever killed people who deserved it; as his victims mostly consist of various Mooks and Redshirts, the narrative treats this as him telling it like it is rather than the What the Hell, Hero? moment it ought to be.
- The mid-2000s revelation that Charles had in fact cheated his way to academic and athletic accolades in high school had this effect on Cain, just as it had the reverse effect on his brother. Granted, trying to kill the guy for decades was pure Disproportionate Retribution on his part, but anyone with an overachieving sibling knows the frustration Cain must have felt.
- Mystique is ultimately this in the long run. While she does have a Dark and Troubled Past involving at least one abusive father, has aided the X-Men, has a loving relationship with her girlfriend (later retconned wife) Destiny and has a few Pet the Dog and redeeming moments concerning her children Nightcrawler and Rogue, none of that changes the fact that Mystique is a chronic backstabber, sadistic mass murderer who formed the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, is an insanely abusive mother to all children and has even sexually assaulted a minor in Worst X-Men Ever. It’s most glaring in House of X where Sabretooth is subjected to a Fate Worse than Death for his crimes, whilst Mystique is part of the Krakoa Mutant high council even though her villain record is as bad as Creed’s and with the Council's refusal to resurrect Destiny, she might as well have a sign hung around her neck stating "WILL BETRAY THIS COUNCIL ANY DAY NOW" in neon letters.
- In 1986, writers tried to make Scott look sympathetic by turning Madelyne into a Wet Blanket Wife who started disapproving of his involvement with the X-Men, hoping to give Scott an acceptable reason to walk out on his wife and son to join up with the rest of the original X-Men (including a resurrected Jean) in X-Factor. Instead, it looked like abandoning his family to shack up with his ex, especially since he initially kept Madelyne and his son a secret from Jean. Many readers at the time turned on Scott for good, including fans who later became X-writers (see above). Scott later angsted about Madelyne and the baby disappearing, but it came off disingenuous since he'd walked out on them in the first place.
- Professor X's insanely privileged background, combined with the retcon that he was in fact using his mutant abilities to skate through all the troubles of adolescence and become a star student besides (something Juggernaut always accused him of, but was never confirmed or even validated before Chuck Austen's run which canonized it) robs Xavier of a large chunk of what made him sympathetic and made him relatable only to the most affluent of trust fund kids. He still has his idealism in bridging the divide between humans and mutants, but even that is tainted now by what a Manipulative Bastard he is when he feels like he needs to be.
- Values Dissonance:
- The Magic Plastic Surgery that turned Psylocke from a relatively wholesome Caucasian Brit to a very sexualized Japanese ninja. It was done because Jim Lee wanted to draw her as a sexy ninja chick, and no attempt was ever made at hiding it. Though it was intended to be temporary, it ended up making Psylocke so popular that the upper management at Marvel forbade the writers from reverting it (this being a time where every sale counted in the Speculation Boom). This created some rather awkward situations. For one, Psylocke became by and far the most iconic Asian hero for Marvel (and maybe even super hero comics in general), when the few they had before such as Shang-Chi, Jubilee, Sunfire and Faiza Hussain were nowhere near her level (Jubilee being the closest contender, but she was a Scrappy at the time and her appeal was very different), despite not having been born or culturally Asian. This especially came to head later, when Marvel made many legitimate attempts at authentic diversity, and yet Psylocke remained prominent and her reasons for looking Asian just got weirder with a "Freaky Friday" Flip retcon, until C.B. Cebulski put his foot down and in 2018 she reverted to her original body to put an end of Betsy appropriating something that isn't hers, which would culminate in Dawn of X turning Kwannon, "killed" off not long after the body swap reveal, into the new Psylocke and Betsy, the new Captain Britain. Some admit it's a better development then simply reverting them, as the racial politics are completely sidestepped though others admit they like Betsy as a ninja. Tellingly, while nearly all adaptations do retain her being an Asian ninja, they usually have the body swap aspect Adapted Out or simply gloss over it, to avoid opening that can of worms.
- Furthermore, as originally Psylocke was altered to look like a Chinese woman to work for a Chinese man, the Retcon that she was body swapped with a Japanese woman opens the doors to Interchangeable Asian Cultures on top of everything else.
- For three decades (starting from 1976) the comics unashamedly featured Wolverine chain smoking cigars and cigarettes all the time (though this is handwaved in that his healing factor helps negate the long term effects of smoking tobacco). Not anymore.
- Vindicated by History: The original series was never a top-seller, but sales had declined so much by the end of the 1960s that the book was cancelled. A little bit later, the series (with its original numbering) returned, but only as a reprint title. A number at Marvel did like the book and the characters, but they couldn't figure out how to bring them back until 1975s Giant-Sized X-Men #1. After that was published and received strong response, Marvel has kept the X-Men in regular publication ever since — adding many spin-offs and mini-series to the archive (and many hours of outside, successful media).
- Win Back the Crowd: The Fall of X limited series and minis were all contested, but Dark X-Men got some attention for the promise of finally having Madelyne Pryor confront and hopefully overcome the worst version of herself, maybe even have a healthier relationship with Alex Summers.
- Why Would Anyone Take Him Back?: Asked by the fandom in the 90s of Gambit after he was outed for his role in the Mutant Massacre. He was eventually accepted back by the team, though his fandom never really recovered.
- The Woobie:
- The Morlocks after having been massacred by the Marauders.
- To say that Lorna has not had it easy would be an understatement. She's been possessed by the psionic being Malice, had Alex dump her at the altar, was at ground zero for the Genosha attack, lost her powers on M-Day and she learned that she accidentally killed her parents when her powers first manifested.
- Rachel Summers grew up in a Bad Future ruled by the Sentinels. From childhood to adolescence, she was made to hunt down Mutants for Ahab and after breaking free from his control was sent to a concentration camp. Then she ended up in a timeline where she was never born, her mother died and her father had a different child.
- The Sentinels of Rachel's world end up expanding beyond the United States, becoming a global problem, but with the help of Excalibur, Rachel is able to reprogram the Sentinels into machines of human protection, whether the humans in question have x-factor genes or not. Her reward for this good deed is being banished to the Age of Apocalypse timeline. This time there's no movement in place to help her escape to the 616 setting. She tries to start one but ends up dieing here. Still, her efforts do lead to the Age of Apocalypse eventually being averted altogether. Rachel's reward for that is being imprisoned on a The Earth That Was, turned into one giant Power Nullifier prison with a sadist who forces her to cry out for Cable, because her good deeds during the Age of Apocalypse really upset somebody.
- Rachel doesn't often realize it, due to the comparitively subdued nature of 616, but she's being hunted constantly. Finally saving Days of Future Past from the Sentinels didn't get Ahab off her case, Mojo created an entirely new species of predator capable of giving Rachel seizures whose only purpose is hunt Rachel, the Omniversal Majestrix herself Saturnyne hates Rachel's guts and has proven willing to subvert orders from her direct superior to ensure Rachel's guts are splattered, and the Shi'Ar have an entire division of death commandos periodically released to kill Rachel. Little wonder "what is, is" became a core tenant of her pseudo religion.
- Nate Grey very much so. A Laser-Guided Tyke-Bomb from a Bad Future who fell into a completely different universe where almost everyone fears him. And that's just the beginning.
- Also the Parental Incest part. Madelyne (or 'Maddy' as he generally refers to her) is the first friend he has in the whole world. When she goes bad, it hurts him big time, though Jean does keep reaching out to him, despite his initial rejection of her.
- It doesn't help that a whole bunch of 616 universe heroes were villains in the Age of Apocalypse, and vice versa.
- He couldn't be around his functional brother, the man who most relates to and wants the help him, because their psychic powers caused each other pain if they got within speaking distance. While this problem is eventually overcame, the woman he loves most of all, Melody Jacobs, having powers that will send him to an early grave if he hangs around her too long, is not. It's in fact made worse when a jealous "Maddie" kills Threnody only for Thren's powers to resurrect Thren's medically dead body due to the location she was killed in. The "eat Nate" aspects of them kick into overdrive as they desperately reach out for energy to keep her alive, and Jacobs has to deliberately hurt Grey emotionally to save him from her.
- Omega Sentinel was turned into a Human Weapon against her will and compelled to hunt mutants. Saved by the people she was modified to destroy, she dedicated herself the mutant cause, but has since been hijacked three times and every time the X-Men simply assume Karima Sharipandar has betrayed them. The only time Omega Sentinel actually "betrayed" the X-Men, it was to work for Magneto, showing she was still dedicated the mutant cause. The X-Men do at least save her from her hijackings, but one would think the team would get the message that she's loyal. They know first Marvel 616, the purely biological humans are just as vulnerable to hijacking and worse as the cyborgs are and thus had plenty of experience with Not Himself before Karima joined them.
- Writer on Board: With a number of his former fans going on to write for Marvel themselves, Wolverine is a frequent beneficiary of this, often being written as an unstoppable badass who is always right no matter what horrible thing he does or suggests doing. It's not usually so bad when the writers instead focus on other characters, but sometimes it can be quite extreme.
- Wolverine went the other direction in Uncanny Avengers, where he was portrayed as a bloodthirsty idiot whose main role was being lectured at by the more "enlightened" members of the team. This, naturally, didn't satisfy many people either.
- As Wolverine's Opposite-Sex Clone, it's perhaps not a surprise that X-23 gets slathered with this too. Run, don't walk, away from any issue her creator Craig Kyle has penned.
- In the mainstream universe, Cyclops killed Professor X while possessed, as such, he instantly became one of the world's worst villains in the eyes of the X-Men, and essentially became the leader of a new Brotherhood of Evil Mutants; meanwhile, Wolverine was depicted as being in the right for blaming Cyclops for the Professor's death despite the fact that Scott clearly wasn't in control of himself, and ended up as Xavier's rightful successor as leader of the X-Men school. However, in the home timeline of long-term Exiles member Nocturne, Wolverine killed Professor X while possessed, and subsequently ended up as Xavier's rightful successor as leader of the X-Men school; meanwhile, Cyclops was depicted as being in the wrong for blaming Wolverine for the Professor's death despite the fact that Logan clearly wasn't in control of himself, became Persona Non Grata in the eyes of the X-Men, went crazy and became the leader of a new Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. In short, Wolverine is always right and Cyclops is always wrong, no matter which side either of them is on.
- Prior to the asylum's takeover, attempts by Wolverine to physically fight Cyclops would end with Wolverine face down on the floor or on his back, regardless of whether Scott used his eye beams or not, regardless of whether Logan was using a sensible strategy or not. To even have trouble would suggest something with seriously wrong with Scott, such as the series of issues that ultimately lead to him leaving the team to stay with Madelyne Pryor, after Summers became conflicted about his opposing committments, and that went away as soon as his brother Alex called him back. Post Asylum running, Wolverine's not only fast enough to block the light speed force beams but strong enough to not be immediately smacked in the face with his own claws when he puts him infront of enough force to toss crowds of men into the air. Cyclops generally still is allowed to be as effective as one would expect in combat, when Wolverine isn't involved in the story arc.
