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It was hard being an X-Men fan in the ’10s, and it’s hard to find legitimately great X-Men stories, especially compared to the prior decade. However, there are some great X-Men stories from this time period if you look hard enough. These ten ’10s X-Men stories are the best of an eh bunch, and weigh heavily towards the beginning of the decade and the end.
10) “Second Coming”

“Second Coming” is the culmination of a story that began in the ’00s. Hope Summers was the first mutant born after House of M, and the X-Men books developed her as a back story, as well as building up the threat of the returned Bastion and his council of anti-mutant racists who were all resurrected in the Yost/Kyle X-Force run. The Hope plot and the Bastion plot would come to a head in “Second Coming”, a story that saw Bastion unleash his greatest attack against the mutant isle of Utopia. “Second Coming” ran through all of the X-Men books of 2010 — Uncanny X-Men, X-Force, New Mutants, X-Men: Legacy. Hope and Cable return to the present and Bastion unleashes his final assault on the mutants. This is an extremely dark story, with a major death, and that can work against it, but it’s also a pretty cool ride for X-Men fans, paying off years of plotlines.
9) X-Men (Vol. 5) #3

The announcement that Jonathan Hickman was taking over the X-Men was moment of happiness for a fandom that had just been through years of Marvel doing everything they could to get the X-Men cancelled (it honestly felt like that; X-Men: Gold, Astonishing X-Men (Vol. 4), and “X-Men Disassembled” aren’t anything that you’d want to re-read). However, he only took over in the last half of 2019, which is going to limit the amount of Hickman that appears here, despite him being one of the X-Men’s best writers. Hickman’s X-Men (Vol. 5) spun out of House of X/Powers of X, and as a whole isn’t the greatest X-Men series ever (I have… thoughts on “X of Swords”), but there are a lot of cool stories. The best of 2019 is X-Men (Vol. 5) #3, by Hickman and Leinil Yu. Cyclops, Emma Frost, and Sebastian Shaw go to the Savage Land, where the Krakoans are growing the flowers that power their pharmaceutical markets, when something goes wrong. They meet Hordeculture, a group of villains who are basically The Golden Girls meet crazy comic book science. It’s one of the most entertaining moments in the entire Krakoa Era, and is definitely worth a read.
8) Avengers Vs. X-Men

Avengers Vs. X-Men, by Brian Michael Bendis, Jonathan Hickman, Ed Brubaker, Matt Fraction, Jason Aaron, John Romita Jr., Olivier Coipel, and Adam Kubert, isn’t a story with the best reputation. It pits the Avengers against the X-Men over the Phoenix Force and then goes crazy halfway through. It’s basically just a bunch of Marvel’s best creators of the early ’10s banging action figures together. However, that’s why Avengers Vs. X-Men has aged so well. It’s just an action-packed, turn off your brain story with one of the coolest Spider-Man moments ever, and a last issue that is one of the best big fight issues of the 2010s. It’s definitely not perfect and it makes Cyclops’s X-Men look pretty bad throughout, but in a decade with the paucity of good X-Men stories that the ’10s have, it’s one of the best.
7) “Everything Is Sinister”

After X-Men: Schism, Utopia got a lot less crowded, with Wolverine taking most of the kids and a large portion of the most experienced X-Men. Cyclops was left with a reduced force, but he also had all of the most powerful mutants, which leads up to Uncanny X-Men (Vol. 2) #1-4, by Kieron Gillen and Carlos Pacheco, four issues titled “Everything is Sinister”. Cyclops decides to create the most powerful X-Men team ever, naming it the Extinction Team — Cyclops, Emma Frost, Hope Summers, Magneto, Magik, Colossus (with the power of the Juggernaut), Storm, Namor, and Danger. This team has their work cut out for them, as Mister Sinister returns with a plan to get Celestial technology from San Francisco’s Golden Celestial. If you liked the more campy Sinister of the Krakoa Era, this is the story for you, as Gillen finally gives the character a personality beyond shadowy manipulator. The art by the late great Carlos Pacheco is sensational, making the story look like a billion dollars.
6) Wolverine and the X-Men #1-3

After X-Men: Schism (we’re getting there), Wolverine went back to Westchester and rebuilt the X-Mansion, dubbing it the Jean Grey Institute for Higher Learning, a slap in the face to Cyclops. Wolverine and the X-Men #1-3, by Jason Aaron and Chris Bachalo, tells the story of the first days of the school, as the New York state Board of Education visits at the worst time possible. The school is barely finished, Wolverine is tired and angry, and there’s a major threat to everything boiling up. Wolverine and the X-Men is the fun school book, and this three issue story does a great job of laying out its status quo and introducing the students and faculty — Kitty Pryde, Iceman, Beast, Rachel Summers, Toad, Husk, Doop, Warbird, Quentin Quire, Oya, Broo, Kid Gladiator, and more. There’s a splash of Morrison’s New X-Men combined with some good old-fashioned X-Men soap opera and some great action from Aaron and Bachalo.













