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The ’80s were the X-Men’s best decade, and this story takes place during that period, when Elizabeth Braddock and the X-Men walked through the Siege Perilous, leading to her being body-swapped with Kwannon. Seeley does a good job of capturing the characters of the era, but if I’m being honest, this feels like a weird time to set this story. Fans love Kwannon Psylocke, and she eventually takes the helm in the story, but this is a very early version, one who doesn’t remember her life or Betsy’s. Her fans begged for her to get another series after the last ended, so it feels weird to give her a book starring a version of the character that isn’t completely the one that readers want.
Rating: 2.5 out of 5
| Pros | Cons |
| The ending sets up would could be a good story as it goes on | Highlights the most confusing time in Psylocke’s life |
| A lot of the first half feels superfluous | |
| Takes a lot of X-Men lore knowledge to figure out everything |
Psylocke: Ninja #1 Struggles To Justify Its Existence
A lot of the focus of the book is on Matsuo Tsurayaba, a member of the Hand who played a big role in late ’80s/early ’90s X-Men books, but hasn’t been important in years. The entire time I was reading this issue, I kept questioning everything about it. The issue is well-paced and works from the standpoint of it being a story that makes narrative sense, but it feels more like it’s for older fans than the current Psylocke fans, many of whom like her because of Marvel Rivals.
It doesn’t really look like it’s going to connect to the character’s current status quo, and I found it kind of hard to get into the book. Seeley does do good work, so the series might end up good in the long run, but as far as first issues go, jumping into the most complicated time in the character’s history was a choice. There’s a way to do this issue that ignores explaining the whole Kwannon/Betsy thing and gets to the story faster than this one, and that honestly would have been better.









