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However, there’s definitely an aspect of looking at the past with rose-colored glasses when it comes to the Krakoa Era. As great as it was times, there were numerous problems with it, as Marvel did make some big missteps during those years. These are the seven biggest mistakes of the Krakoa Era, hurting the era and leading to its disappointing ending.
7) Fall of the House of X

Fall of the House of X was part of the one-two punch that ended the Krakoa Era, and it was terrible. It was written by Gerry Duggan, who had been doing an underwhelming job on X-Men (Vol. 6) and this book was everything wrong with his X-Men writing: bad humor, lots of characters who were completely out of character, and simple, dumb plot points. Artist Lucas Werneck is usually amazing, but his art in this book looked rush and wasn’t up to his usual standards. Everything about this book was a mistake, and it dragged down Krakoa’s end.
6) The Synch and Talon Relationship

X-Men (Vol. 5) #18-19 was one of the best X-Men stories of the last five years, and it planted the seeds for a huge mistake. This story put Synch and Wolverine II together as a couple for centuries in the Vault, a place where time ran differently, with only Synch escaping. Eventually, the team would go back to the Vault and found her body in stasis. The two of them began their relationship again, and it was one of the worst parts of X-Men (Vol. 6). We were constantly told how much they love each other, but what we saw never matched that. It was a waste of page space, and played a key role in making X-Men (Vol. 6) terrible.
5) Doctor Stasis

Marvel has created some cool villains lately, but Doctor Stasis isn’t one of them. He was the main antagonist of the horrible X-Men (Vol. 6) and was kind of a waste of a character. Much like Mister Sinister, he was a clone of Nathaniel Essex, working with the humans in order to figure out how to become a Dominion. The problem with the character is that he was basically just a second version of Mister Sinister. The only difference between with them was who they worked with. We didn’t need two Mister Sinisters, and Doctor Stasis never did anything to make an argument for why he should have existed. Duggan apparently wanted to use Sinister in his book and when he wasn’t allowed (because the character was appearing in the superior Immortal X-Men), so he created this rip off that stank up the end of the era.












