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This story starts out wonderfully, dropping readers into a battle between the X-Men and a giant monster. It’s an exciting little fight that shows Rogue as a leader, while reminding readers of her past. This is a great way to start a new issue. New readers might not know that Rogue is a leader (especially if they’re X-Men ’97 fans but haven’t picked up the comics in a while), so showing her in the field and how proficient she is in command is a great thing to show. There’s a little tease of which way the story is going to go in the first few pages, and the whole sequence is extremely entertaining. Schultz does a bang-up job of showing why Rogue is one of the X-Men’s best superheroines, and she nails the character’s individual voice and where she is as a character right now. Even if you don’t know a lot about her in the past few years, this story will still work for you.
Rating: 4 out of 5
| Pros | Cons |
| Schultz nails Rogue’s individual voice | It feels more like a Wolverine plot, even though Rogue fits into it well |
| Well-paced issue that uses its page real estate very well | |
| Gorgeous art that is fluid and detailed |
The opening fight introduces the issue’s main plot, and what follows is a well-paced section of the book that will get readers more interested in the book’s central mystery. Rogue’s past as a villain is an important part of her origin, and this issue plays off that nicely, using it as the basis for a mystery that takes Rogue to Mystique and Destiny. Schultz is able to capture the imperious Destiny nicely (something some recent X-writers don’t do well), as well as Mystique’s more doting love of Rogue. I think one of the things I love about the way the issue is written is how Schultz is able to deepen the mystery of the book without giving away too much of the ghost too quickly, making it more and more intriguing. This issue succeeds at creating a book that’s going to draw fans in. If I have a problem with it, it’s that this doesn’t really feel like a Rogue story, but it’s well done enough that this is a minor qualm.









