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Nostalgia has played a big role in why these comics are so beloved, as we’ve grown to love them over the years. However, going back to these stories and reading them in the present reveals something rather sad: these stories that you’ve loved for so long just don’t stand up. These five Marvel events aren’t as great as you remember, nostalgia blinding you to these their flaws.
5) “Fatal Attractions”

“Fatal Attractions” is one of the biggest X-Men events of the ’90s, pitting the X-Men against Magneto and his new Acolytes. Magneto took control of Graymalkin, Cable’s massive space station, and transformed it into Avalon, and began a rapture of worthy mutants, bringing them to his paradise before a disaster strikes down the Earth. Of course, the disaster is one that he engineers, and the X-Men are forced to intervene, resulting in two events that changed Marvel for years: Wolverine’s adamantium torn out by Magneto and Magneto getting mindwiped by Xavier. This story is undeniably important, but people often forget that it’s more than just the three most important issues โ Uncanny X-Men #304, X-Men (Vol. 2) #25, and Wolverine (Vol. 2) #75 โ with X-Force, X-Factor, and Excalibur all getting tangential issues that sort of tie in but don’t. It’s a story that’s half great and half dross, and most people just forget the dross to look back wistfully on the great parts.
4) The 1991 X-Men Reboot

The ’90s were the X-Men’s decade, and a big reason for that was the 1991 reboot of the X-Men books. Chris Claremont was leaving Uncanny X-Men, The New Mutants was ending, and X-Factor’s cast of the original five X-Men were returning to the team. Readers were treated to new numbers one with X-Force #1 and X-Men (Vol. 2) #1, and Uncanny X-Men, X-Factor, and Excalibur all got new status quos and creative teams. A lot of fans look back on these months with fondness, but if you go back and read the comics, most of them suffer from the style over substance approach that Marvel was all about at the time. X-Factor #71 and Excalibur #42 are pretty great, but the other three are just kind of alright (except X-Force #1, which is kind of bad). Millions of people became X-Men fans because of these books, buy they just don’t stand up.











