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“Age of Apocalypse” is a legendary story, and X-Man, from Jeph Loeb and Steve Skroce, was given a chance no other AoA book was given; it was continuing after the story ended. If we’re being honest, the first couple of the years of the book were pretty sensational. For a little over two years, X-Man was the best book starring Cable, with creators like John Ostrander, Terry Kavanagh, Luke Ross, Roger Cruz, Val Semeiks, Alan Davis, Pasqual Ferry, Cary Nord, ChrisCross, Ariel Olivetti, Marc Pajarillo, and J.H. Williams III turning in great work on the character over the course of 48-issues. Cable was always one of the most popular Marvel mutant antiheroes, but X-Man was able to go in new directions, and gave readers a classic superhero series that doesn’t get the credit it deserves.
X-Man Was Able to Tap into an Early Spider-Man Vibe That Just Worked

Right from the word go, X-Man was a cool departure from Cable, and I think that was the main reason it caught on. Cable was exactly the kind of book you’d expect it to be in 1994. Loeb was fleshing out Nathan’s past in the future, introducing characters like Blaquesmith and taking things in mildly interesting directions. It was very much an early ’90s antihero comic; fine for what it was, but nothing special, with the art usually being better than the writing. X-Man was a completely different kind of comic, with a traumatized teenager with immeasurable power trying to find his place in the world.
The AoA issues followed Nate, Forge, Toad, Sauron, Mastermind, and Brute on the run from Apocalypse and Sinister, which ended with Nate on his way to fight Apocalypse. X-Men Omega #1 would see him pulled by the M’Kraan Crystal into the main universe, and issue 5 would open with him trying to figure out what happened and survive. The book hit second gear during this period, with Suicide Squad legend John Ostrander teaming Nate with Madelyne Pryor, as the two of them start to make waves in the Marvel Universe, with battles against Xavier, his AoA foe Holocaust, Exodus, X-Cutioner, and more. Ostrander’s short time on the book, from issue 9 to when Terry Kavanagh started co-writing in issue 15, was as great as you’d expect, and set the book up for its next phase under Kavanagh.









