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There are some Marvel events that everyone knows and they get praised (or jeered) as much as they deserve. However, there are numerous events that don’t get the love or credit that they should. These ten Marvel events are the most underrated, each of them better than they get credit for.
10) AXIS

Uncanny Avengers (Vol. 1) was an Avengers classic, and it built up to this event. Avengers vs. X-Men: AXIS, by Rick Remender, Adam Kubert, Leinil Yu, Terrydodson, and Jim Cheung saw the Avengers, X-Men, and villains team up to battle Red Onslaught, the Red Skull with Professor X’s mental powers transformed into the ultimate villain of mid ’90s Marvel. A last ditch plan changes everything and leads to another conflict unlike anything you’ve ever seen before. This book has been maligned for years for various reasons, but reading it in a vacuum reveals a fun superhero yarn. It’s just big dumb spectacle, and it’s honestly a lot of fun.
9) Marvel: The End

Marvel: The End, by Jim Starlin and Al Milgrom, saw the Starlin return to Thanos to tell a story that truly ends the Marvel Universe. Egyptian pharaoh turned cosmic godlike entity Akhenatan attacks the Earth, with Thanos trying to figure out how to sto himp from destroying everything as the heroes do their best to fight against the godlike being. This story is the kind of big spectacle that you expect from the guy who wrote Infinity Gauntlet, and it even had a pretty big effect on the ’00s Marvel Universe that most fans don’t even realize. It’s a forgotten classic.
8) “The Twelve”

The ’90s belonged to the X-Men, and the mutants ended the 20th century with a bang. “The Twelve” had been built up over 1998 and 1999 in X-Men and Uncanny X-Men, and ran through those two books, Wolverine, and X-Man at end of ’99. Apocalypse makes his final attack on the world, trying to gather the Twelve, a dozen mutants who can make him into a god, so he can take his place as ruler of the Earth. This story gets a lot of flack, but it’s honestly a really fun X-story that pays off numerous ’90s plots, and ended the team’s greatest decade in style.
7) Secret War

2004’s Secret War, by Brian Michael Bendis and Gabrielle del’Otto, is one of the most important events in Marvel history and most fans don’t even realize it. This was the first event of Marvel’s ’00s event cycle, beginning a story that would run across New Avengers, Civil War, The Mighty Avengers, and Secret Invasion. As an army of upgraded tech villains start attacking several heroes, they begin to regain memories of a battle in Latveria that none of them remembered until then. This is a Bendis event, so it’s more about the drama than the action, but its short length doesn’t allow him to waste as much page space as he would in other longer events. The painted art by dell’Otto is gorgeous; it meant that the book didn’t come out monthly, but it gives the story an amazing visual identity.
6) X Lives of Wolverine

X Lives of Wolverine, by Benjamin Percy and Joshua Cassara, was the first X-Men comic after Jonathan Hickman left the X-office during the Krakoa Era. It was the sister book of X Deaths of Wolverine, and this one told the story of Wolverine sent back in time by Xavier and Jean Grey to stop a time-traveling Omega Red from killing Xavier in the past. This is peak Wolverine goodness, full of awesome fights and cool moments from his history. Percy is a brilliant Wolverine writer, so he nails the character, and Cassara’s art is amazing. X Deaths is maligned, and X Lives often gets tarred with the same brush, but if you love Wolvie, this is the event for you.













