Videos by ComicBook.com
The X-Men have had some history-shaking covers, with some of the coolest images ever fronting their stories. However, there are so many groundbreaking X-Men covers, ones that had a huge effect on the comic industry, it isn’t funny. These ten X-Men covers are amazing, and changed the tenor of comics forever.
10) X-Men (Vol. 1) #94

Chris Claremont changed the X-Men and comic history, taking over the team after Giant-Size X-Men #1 with X-Men (Vol. 1) #94. This was the first time an all-new X-Men story had been published in his book since X-Men (Vol. 1) #67 and the cover is perfect. Drawn by Dave Cockrum, Gil Kane, and Danny Crespi, this cover told its own story and dared you to walk by it without picking it up. The composition is perfect, capturing an insane moment and all of the emotion of it. This cover jumps out at you, and it is an example of why those early Cockrum covers are so amazing.
9) X-Men (Vol. 1) #139

Every team has cover tropes of their own, images and ideas that are brought back numerous times over the decades. X-Men (Vol. 1) #139 introduced a cover trope to the X-Men, one that we would see many, many times over the years. This was the first time we saw “Welcome to the X-Men, (blank), hope you survive the experience” on the cover, and it would become a favorite of fans and artists as the years went on. John Byrne, Terry Austin, and Jim Novak gave readers a best of all-time cover with this one, and it would introduce a cover trope that has even spread beyond the X-Men.
8) X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills

In the 1980s, Marvel started a line of one-shot graphic novels, stories that were often more mature than the monthlies. Their 15th graphic novel in the series was X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills. This story is a stone cold classic, a tale that is still prescient 44 years later. This cover by Brent Anderson is one of the most perfect covers you can imagine. It has a great shot of the team, and the background does an amazing job of hinting at the ideas in the story. It’s a cover that grabs you, and it has exactly the kind of tone you’d expect from a tale like this.
7) Uncanny X-Men #213

Wolverine and Sabretooth have had some amazing battles, and they all started with the one in Uncanny X-Men #213. They’ve become two of comics’ greatest rivals, and this amazing cover from Alan Davis and Paul Neary kicked off their enmity. This image is perfect. It showcases the two combatants, capturing their rage and resolve to kill the other gorgeously. Wolverine was the star of the team back at this point, and this cover was everything that readers in 1986 would have wanted from a comic.
6) X-Men (Vol. 1) #9

The X-Men and the Avengers are Marvel’s two greatest teams (sorry, Fantastic Four fans, but Marvel’s First Family is the third best team), and have numerous crossovers over the years. The first time the two teams appeared on a cover together was X-Men (Vol. 1) #9, with this fantastic cover from Jack Kirby, Chic Stone, and Sam Rosen. This clash of the two teams is amazing, and this is just half the cover. The other half sees Xavier battling against the man who paralyzed him, Lucifer. So, not only did this cover give readers the first X-Men/Avengers crossover, but also a major revelation about the life of Charles Xavier. Simply marvelous.













