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Looking over the team’s history, there are some excellent stories, from multi-part epics to single issue character dramas. The X-Men have been in every kind of story you could imagine, and have pushed the comic industry forward in their best stories. These ten X-Men stories are the best of the best, shining bright from the team’s over 60 year history.
10) Inferno

The Krakoa Era started with a blast, but Hickman’s X-Men wasn’t great. It would be easy to say that he wrote amazing X-Men events and good X-Men stories, but “X of Swords” puts the lie to that (although you can probably blame how mid that one was on co-creator Tini Howard and the other X-writers; the Hickman written parts are the few parts of the story worth reading). However, Hickman’s last story on Krakoa is outstanding. Inferno, by Hickman, Valerio Schiti, R.B. Silva, and Stefano Caselli, sees the writer put the kibosh on his time on the mutant island with a four-issue story full of intrigue, big moments, a mindbending twist, and a final battle issue that will knock your socks off. Inferno is way better than the reputation of the latter day Krakoa books has you believe, and deserves its flowers.
9) “Inferno”

Yes, I did this on purpose. Chris Claremont is the most revolutionary X-Men writer, having created everything that everyone loves about the team. His first run with the men and women of X lasted 17 years and gave us numerous best of all time stories. Claremont helped change the way the crossover event worked, and his final massive summer crossover is easily his best (sorry, “Mutant Massacre” and “Fall of the Mutants”, although both are good). “Inferno” brought the Madelyne Pryor plot to a head, as Cyclops’s spurned wife teamed with the demons of Limbo for revenge against everyone. This story is massive, combining all of the ’80s X-teams with heroes from Marvel’s NYC, and it will knock your socks off. This is the end of peak Claremont, and it’s amazing.
8) “Planet X”

There are people out there who will try to convince you that “Planet X” is bad because it makes Magneto into an evil terrorist, but these people don’t understand the subtext of Morrison’s New X-Men or Magneto as a character. This story blew New X-Men wide open, as most of the team’s problems were revealed to be orchestrated by their greatest enemy. They’re outclassed, outsmarted, and overwhelmed, yet they never give up. Morrison and artist Phil Jimenez, an amazing team whenever they work together, give readers a twisting, turning narrative that will take them to some amazing places. I was reading the book monthly all those years ago, and it was quite a ride (I even know how Morrison was originally going to kill SPOILER because Phil Jimenez told me at a signing years ago).
7) “The Brood Saga”

“The Brood Saga” is a masterpiece of sci-fi horror. The story re-teamed Claremont with artist Dave Cockrum, and the two of them made magic. It introduced the Brood, probably because Claremont had watched Alien again or something, in a story that saw the X-Men face off against a foe unlike any they had ever seen before. “The Brood Saga” is a flawless piece of superhero perfection, with Cockrum’s amazing pencils really bringing the whole thing to life. When most people think of Claremont’s greatest artistic partners, they usually jump right to John Byrne, but “The Brood Saga” proves just how amazing Cockrum and Claremont were together.
6) House of X/Powers of X

X-Men fans love the Krakoa Era, even with the mediocre ending, and they have from the start. House of X/Powers of X, by Jonathan Hickman, Pepe Larraz, and R.B. Silva, kicked off this bold new era by tearing down everything that defined the team and replacing it. The mutants moved to the island of Krakoa, creating their own nation, having to deal with all of problems of nation-building, all while dealing with the most powerful anti-mutant force ever. As all of that is going on, the biggest secret in X-Men history is revealed. HoX/PoX is a wild ride, the two books that are one taking readers through time and the multiverse to tell a story unlike anything you’ve ever read.













