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Age of Apocalypse

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"Age of Apocalypse"
File:Xmenalpha.jpg
Cover to X-Men Alpha. Art by Joe Madureira.
PublisherMarvel Comics
Publication date19951996
Genre
Title(s)
Age of Apocalypse: The Chosen
Amazing X-Men #1-4
Astonishing X-Men #1-4
Factor X #1-4
Gambit & the X-Ternals #1-4
Generation Next #1-4
Weapon X #1-4
X-Calibre #1-4
X-Man #1-4
X-Men Alpha
X-Men Omega
X-Men Chronicles #1-2
X-Universe #1-2
Main character(s)Alternate universe X-Men and associates
Creative team
Writer(s)Rolf Kauka
Scott Lobdell
Mark Waid
Fabian Nicieza
John Francis Moore
Larry Hama
Warren Ellis
Jeph Loeb
Howard Mackie
Terry Kavanagh
Penciller(s)Roger Cruz
Steve Epting
Joe Madureira
Andy Kubert
Tony Daniel
Salvador Larroca
Chris Bachalo
Adam Kubert
Ken Lashley
Steve Skroce
Terry Dodson
Ian Churchill
Carlos Pacheco
Joe Bennett
(plus assorted artists who did pin-ups)

"Age of Apocalypse" is a comic book crossover storyline published in the X-Men franchise of books by Marvel Comics. Although occurring in the alternate universe of Earth-295, it has often had ramifications in the universe of Earth-616, the main Marvel Comics universe.

Storyline

Legion (David Haller), a powerful psionic mutant on Earth and son of Professor Charles Xavier and Israeli diplomat Gabrielle Haller, travels back in time with the intention of killing Magneto, Xavier's former best friend and current archnemesis, to improve conditions. When David is on the verge of ending Magneto's life, Xavier places himself between the two, and Legion inadvertently kills Xavier instead. Due to a "Grandfather paradox", Legion then ceases to exist as Xavier now died before Legion was even fathered.

Because of Xavier's sacrifice, Magneto comes to believe in his late friend's dream of peaceful coexistence between humans and mutants. Apocalypse, an immortal mutant who has been alive for centuries, was monitoring the fight. In this reality, he chooses this moment as the perfect time to begin his "survival of the fittest" genetic war, which doesn't happen in the regular Marvel Universe until ten years later.

In this timeline, Magneto assembles the X-Men before Apocalypse establishes himself as a major power. Apocalypse comes to rule all of North America, with the Statue of Liberty replaced by a gigantic statue of his visage, and initiates a worldwide genocidal campaign of "cullings" in which millions of humans die. The surviving humans live in parts of Europe and Africa that haven't been devastated by nuclear weapons. Fleets of Sentinels are their only defense.

Meanwhile, the disturbance of the timeline leads to the M'Kraan Crystal sending out a crystallization wave that is heading toward Earth.

Magneto, as leader of the X-Men, leads a resistance movement against Apocalypse's forces. In the X-Men's early days, Magneto's daughter, the Scarlet Witch, is killed by Apocalypse's henchman Nemesis, who later becomes Holocaust. Some time later, Weapon X (Wolverine) and Jean Grey leave the X-Men to follow their own separate path. The Age of Apocalypse storyline begins in the X-Men: Alpha one-shot.

X-Men: Alpha

The comic begins with a hooded figure climbing over piles of corpses. He encounters a fleeing human, who begs him to protect her from the Infinite soldiers who are chasing her. They are soon discovered by the Infinites, led by the Prelate Unus, who attempts to kill the hooded man with a force field attack. The hooded man absorbs the attack however, and Unus realizes he is a mutant. Unus and his Infinites are about to kill the man and the girl when Magneto and his X-Men arrive. The Infinites are quickly defeated, and Iceman kills Unus by freezing him and then shattering him. The hooded man reveals himself to be Bishop, and as soon as he sees Magneto he attempts to kill him, calling him a murderer and blaming him for all the destruction Apocalypse has caused. The X-Men feel Bishop is crazy, but Magneto seems to know exactly what Bishop is talking about.

The scene then switches to Heaven, a Nightclub run by Angel and his two assistants, Scarlett and Karma. Gambit appears in the club asking Angel where he can find Magneto. Angel reluctantly tells him, fearing spies from Apocalypse in his club. Sure enough, Sebastian Shaw sees and overhears the conversation, and immediately informs Apocalypse, who has Karma captured, interrogated, and eventually killed.

X-Men: Alpha also features the appearance of the Elite Mutant Force. Sinister, the foster father of the EMF's leader Cyclops, informs him that he must go away, and Apocalypse soon realizes that Sinister has betrayed him and intends to pursue his own plans. Magneto and the X-Men attempt to decide what to make of Bishop's story, and the comic ends with the appearance of the M'Kraan Crystal heading for Earth.

The Age of Apocalypse then splits into several comic books, each one describing the different quests that the separate groups of Magneto's fighters undertake to defeat Apocalypse and his followers. Following these events, the various stories come together in X-Men: Omega, which details the final end of the Age of Apocalypse.

X-Calibre

X-Calibre is a team centred around Nightcrawler, who is sent by Magneto to locate Destiny, a mutant capable of seeing into the future. Magneto intends to use her to verify Bishop's story. Nightcrawler must travel to Avalon, a secret refuge where mutants and humans live together in peace. Along his journey, he encounters John Proudstar, the pirate Callisto, and his mother Mystique. The chief antagonists for Nightcrawler's journey consist of the Pale Riders, a trio of Apocalypse's servants. One of them, Moonstar, is killed by the Riders' leader Damask, and the third member, Dead Man Wade, is killed by Nightcrawler in Avalon. The Shadow King is the final antagonist Nightcrawler and his allies must overcome. Nightcrawler's team consists of Mystique, Switchback, and Damask, who joins him after realizing the beauty Avalon has to offer. The X-Calibre book gets its name from an in-joke between Nightcrawler and his mother, Mystique, because of the calibre of bullets she uses, simply stamped with an 'X'.

Gambit and the X-Ternals

Gambit's X-Ternals consist of Sunspot, Jubilee, Strong Guy, and Lila Cheney. They are sent deep into space through Lila's teleportation in order to retrieve the M'Kraan Crystal, essential to the verification of Bishop's alternate reality. During their entire journey, the X-Ternals are pursued by Rictor, a henchman of Apocalypse desperate to earn his master's praise by killing Gambit. The X-Ternals also fight the Imperial Guard of the Shi'ar Empire to retrieve the crystal shard. During their battles, Sunspot is killed by absorbing too much solar energy, causing him to explode. On their return to Earth, Strong Guy betrays the team, not only stealing the M'Kraan Crystal, but also stealing Magneto's son Charles. Gambit chooses to protect Lila, whom he loves, rather than retrieving the crystal and the child.

Generation Next

Generation Next consists of a young group of mutant students trained by Colossus and Shadowcat, husband and wife. They consist of Chamber, Husk, Mondo, Vincente, and Skin. They are sent by Magneto into the Seattle Core to rescue Colossus' sister Illyana, who is the last surviving Transdimensional Teleporter. Illyana is a slave of the Sugar Man, one of Apocalypse's prefects and ruler of the Seattle Core. Mondo finds Illyana and secrets her inside of his body, intending to smuggle her out at shift change. When Mondo is found out, the ensuing fight finds the Sugar Man killing Mondo with a blast from his tongue, exposing the rest of Generation Next. While fighting a near hopeless battle, Generation Next is left for dead by Colossus, who leaves them to die rather potentially leave his sister Illyana without him.

Amazing X-Men

The Amazing X-Men consist of Quicksilver (the team's leader), Storm, Dazzler, Banshee, Iceman, and Exodus. The team is sent to Maine by Magneto to aid in the evacuation of humanity to Europe. During this mission, the team fights Apocalypse's Brotherhood of Mutants, as well as Apocalypse's Horseman Abyss, who is defeated (but not killed) by Quicksilver. During their absence from the Xavier Mansion, Magneto and Bishop are attacked by Apocalypse himself, who defeats and captures them both. Quicksilver then sends Iceman to rendezvous with Rogue's team (the Astonishing X-Men), and sends Dazzler and Exodus to find Magneto's son Charles (the two X-Men stumble across Gambit and Lila during their search). Quicksilver, Storm, and Banshee then go to rescue Bishop, who is in the hands of the Madri, Apocalypse's priests. During the fighting, Abyss returns for a rematch, but is defeated and killed by Banshee, who sacrifices his own life to destroy Abyss.

Astonishing X-Men

The Astonishing X-Men are led by Rogue (Magneto's wife) and consist of Sabretooth, Blink, Wild Child, Morph, and Sunfire. They are sent by Magneto to stop the cullings, which are being undertaken by Holocaust, one of Apocalypse's horsemen. While helping with the evacuation and protection of humans, Sabretooth asks Blink to teleport him to Holocaust's location, which she reluctantly does. Sabretooth and Holocaust fight a vicious duel, but Sabretooth is defeated and seemingly killed, to Blink's horror; Sabretooth had rescued Blink from Sinister, and she had come to see him as her dearest friend and mentor. The team then fights Holocaust and his Infinites, destroying his factory. Holocaust manages to escape however, and the team returns to Xavier's mansion, where Rogue learns that both her son and her husband have been captured. Sabretooth is revealed by Iceman to have survived the battle, to Blink's delight.

Weapon X

Weapon X (Logan) and his lover Jean Grey are depicted in this magazine carrying out missions for the Human High Council. Jean and Weapon X drift apart however, as the Human High Council intends to launch a nuclear strike on the U.S.A., and Jean is appalled by the loss of life it would cause. After Weapon X concludes a battle with Donald Pierce (an altered human cyborg), Jean leaves to help evacuate the U.S.A., and bids a tearful farewell to her love. Weapon X is then sent to recruit Gateway, whose teleportation ability is necessary to bring the fleet to America. As the fleet leaves, Weapon X decides to join them, if only to find Jean somewhere in America before the bombs are dropped.

Factor X

Factor X consists of the Elite Mutant Force, who serve Apocalypse. They are split into four sibling pairs: Cyclops and Havok (Scott and Alex Summers), Cannonball and Amazon (Sam and Elizabeth Guthrie), The Bedlam Brothers, and Aurora and Northstar (Jean-Marie and Jean-Paul Beaubier). The EMF is tasked with maintaining control of Apocalypse's breeding pens, where people are imprisoned, and tortured and experimented on by the Beast, also a member of the EMF. Havok is emphasized as an antagonistic character who is jealous of his brother's leadership role. It is later Havok who discovers that Cyclops is in fact a traitor, who has been helping people escape the pens, and in one such escape attempt, both Aurora and Northstar are seriously injured and hospitalized. Havok then exposes Cyclops as a traitor and attempts to kill him, but Cyclops escapes with the aid of Jean Grey, who has arrived to evacuate as many people as she can before the Human High Council's nuclear strike. The Bedlam Brothers also choose to side with Cyclops, and they successfully defeat both Amazon and Cannonball. Cyclops and Jean also defeat Havok, but do not kill him. As Jean and Cyclops lead the prisoners they have freed out of the Pens, Havok is revealed to have survived, still determined to kill his brother.

X-Man

The protagonist of X-Man is Nate Grey, a mutant born of Cyclops' and Jean Grey's DNA, and the most powerful telekenetic in the world. He lives under the guidance of his father figure Forge, who leads a group of outcasts consisting of Mastermind, Toad, Brute, and Sauron, who attack trains and factories of Apocalypse while masquerading as a theatre troupe. During their missions, they rescue Sonique from imprisonment, who joins the team as Nate's lover, and they also encounter a mysterious figure known as Essex, who encourages Nate to untap his full potential against Forge's advice. Brute realizes later that Essex is not what he seems, but is killed by him before he can warn the others. The troupe is attacked by Domino and her allies Caliban and Grizzly, who have been sent by Apocalypse to either recruit Nate or destroy him. During the battle, Toad and Mastermind are both killed, but Domino and her teammates also die. Forge realizes Essex is a traitor, and like Brute, is attacked by him. He dies in Nate's arms. Essex reveals himself to be Sinister, another of Apocalypse's horsemen who in fact created Nate in his lab. Nate defeats Sinister, and decides to leave Sauron and Sonique while he goes to confront Apocalypse personally and avenge Forge's death.

X-Universe

The X-Universe two-issue limited series focuses on a group of humans fighting Mikhail Rasputin, the fourth Horseman of Apocalypse, who has hypnotized the masses of humanity through a mutant named Empath, who is catatonic and used as a weapon. Mikhail is also served by Matthew Murdock, a blind human who takes care of Empath and keeps him alive. A group of humans, Tony Stark, Gwen Stacy, Don Blake, Susan Storm, Ben Grimm, and Victor von Doom, attempt to stop Mikhail by willingly going aboard his ship where they are taken prisoner, only to be reawakened through a ruse undertaken by Stark. They then steal the weapons on board the ship and destroy Mikhail's tower which blocks the evacuation of the human survivors. During these events, a monster battles against the humans resembling the Earth-616 Hulk. Once he reverts to Bruce Banner, however, the Hulk aids the humans. Don Blake kills Mikhail, but he dies in the process. Doom rescues the surviving members of the Human High Council, and the story ends with the humans successfully evacuating and abandoning the planet to its fate.

X-Men: Omega

The final part of the event begins with Magneto, now in Apocalypse's custody, battling with the High Lord. The X-Men, consisting of Rogue, Quicksilver, Blink, Sabretooth, Nightcrawler, Wild Child, Colossus, Shadowcat, Gambit, Jubilee, and Iceman, along with Destiny and Illyana, invade Apocalypse's stronghold using Blink's teleportation. Soon after their arrival they capture the Beast. Meanwhile, the Angel, no longer trusted by Apocalypse, decides to finally choose a side, and after fighting off the Infinites, flies himself into Apocalypse's force field generator, destroying it, but also killing himself in the process. His sacrifice however, allows Nate Grey to enter Apocalypse's citadel. The Human High Council's nuclear attack wipes out half of Apocalypse's western kingdom. Apocalypse decides to kill Magneto immediately, but Nate arrives, and along with Magneto, prepares to battle Apocalypse and Holocaust.

Magneto is freed during the X-Men's attack, and orders Destiny to enter the M'Kraan Crystal with Illyana in order to send Bishop to the past, where he will save Charles Xavier and thus prevent the Age of Apocalypse from ever occurring. Colossus is furious with this decision, as he fears losing Illyana again, but she wants to do as Magneto wishes. Destiny, Illyana, and Bishop carry out their plan, while Magneto resumes his fight with Apocalypse as Nate battles Holocaust.

The X-Men continue their battle against Apocalypse's minions, and when Beast tries to escape through a teleporter, Quicksilver rearranges the coordinates with his super speed, sending Beast to an unknown location.

Meanwhile, Weapon X enters the battlefield looking for Jean who, alongside Cyclops, is leading the prisoners of the breeding pens to safety. Jean uses her telekinetic powers to keep the Human High Council's bombs from dropping, but Havok arrives and kills Jean Grey and shoots his brother Cyclops before Logan, arriving via parachute, kills Havok. As Jean dies in Logan's arms, he sadly realizes that Jean Grey "is no Phoenix".

Illyana and Destiny successfully send Bishop to the past where he kills Legion. Colossus, insane and fearing for Illyana again, rushes to reach her, destroying everything in his path, including Iceman. Shadowcat attempts to restrain him by appearing in his path, trusting that his love for her will prevent him from killing her. Gambit warns her to move, but he is too late; Colossus crushes her and Gambit kills him from behind. Colossus dies just as Illyana returns to him to tell her brother that she succeeded.

Magneto begins to win the fight against Apocalypse, when Strong Guy appears clutching Magneto's son Charles. Luckily, Rogue arrives, kills Strong Guy by absorbing his kinetic energy, and once again Magneto resumes his attack. Nate and Holocaust continue their fight, and Nate stabs him with a shard of the M'Kraan Crystal. Magneto kills Apocalypse by magnetically ripping him in half.

The comic ends with Magneto standing over the ruins of the citadel, watching as the world around them ends. Bishop has succeeded in his mission, and Magneto realizes that he and all around him will soon be no more than memories. He stands with Rogue and his son as the universe is destroyed, thanking Charles Xavier for being in his life.

Characters and affiliations

Mutant heroes

Team Leader Members Notes
Generation Next Colossus and Shadowcat Chamber, Husk, Know-It-All (M), Mondo, Skin, Vincente
The Outcasts Forge Brute (Sunder in normal continuity), Mastermind, Soaron (Sauron in normal continuity), Sonique (Siryn in normal continuity), Toad, X-Man X-Man is the son of Jean Grey and Scott Summers, created from their DNA by Mr. Sinister.
X-Calibre Nightcrawler Damask (the Black Queen of London's Hellfire Club), Mystique, Switchback
X-Men Magneto

Quicksilver, Banshee, Dazzler, Exodus, Iceman, Storm, Rogue, Blink, Morph (Changeling), Sabretooth, Sunfire, and Wild Child

Led out of the ruined Xavier mansion, which never became a school in this universe.
X-Ternals Gambit Lila Cheney, Jubilee, Strong Guy, Sunspot
New Mutants Beak, X-23, Xorn, Silver Samurai, Wolfsbane, Psylocke Mutants that joined Magneto's cause after the fall of Apocalypse.

The only major mutant character missing in the original Age of Apocalypse is Psylocke. When the Age of Apocalypse storyline was revisited a decade later, she appeared in X-Men: Age of Apocalypse #4 in Asian form. Her origin remains unknown. There has been no explanation of what exactly she was doing during the original Age of Apocalypse, other than the fact she had some kind of past connection with Weapon X.

Other Anti-Apocalypse Forces

Besides the X-Men and its many offshoots, the Human High Council remains as the other power opposing Apocalypse. Unlike the X-Men, however, the Human High Council considers the extermination of mutants as a viable option. Bolivar and Moira Trask, as well as Brian Braddock, are the major proponents for a mutant holocaust.

Secretly, the Human High Council supports a Human Underground Resistance.

Team Members Notes
Human High Council Brian Braddock (Captain Britain), Emma Frost, Moira Trask, Thaddeus "Thunderbolt" Ross, Bolivar Trask, Mariko Yashida
Human High Council agents Clint Barton (Hawkeye), Donald Blake (Thor), Carol Danvers (Ms. Marvel), Gateway, Ben Grimm (Thing), Gwen Stacy, Tony Stark (Iron Man), Susan Storm (Invisible Woman), Victor von Doom (Doctor Doom)
Sentinels Programmed to protect humans above anything else for which they are capable of not attacking mutants if it aids in the accomplishment of their Prime Directive.
The Underground Valerie Cooper An underground resistance group that aids refugees escape from North America to Europe.
Henry Peter Gyrich A human supremacist suicide bomber that threatens Heaven.
Robert Kelly An activist of mutant-human peaceful coexistence, for which Apocalypse imprisoned him. Rescued by Magneto, Nightcrawler, and Rogue. Later brokered the Kelly Pact, a non-aggression treaty between the Human High Council and Apocalypse.
Joseph Robertson Maintains the clandestine newspaper Daily Bugle with the purpose of informing humans of the news kept in secret by Apocalypse's regime.
Deceased Mentions Frank Castle Killed in action
Peter Parker Deceased human boyfriend of Gwen Stacy who never became Spiderman

Apocalypse's Agents

Team Members Notes
The Brotherhood of Chaos (Brotherhood of Mutants) Arclight, Box (Madison Jeffries), Copycat, Spyne, Yeti
Death's Inhuman Strike Force Black Bolt, Crystal, Gorgon, Karnak, Lockjaw, Medusa, Rhino, Triton Genetically altered clones of the murdered Inhuman Royal Family.
Domino's Bounty Hunters Caliban, Domino, Grizzly II
Elite Mutant Force Amazon, Aurora, Beast, the Bedlam brothers Jesse Aaronson and Terrence (with a different name as Christopher and also known as King Bedlam of the second incarnation of the Hellions in normal continuity), Cannonball, Cyclops, Emplate, Havok, the Monets, Northstar Sinister's EMF is composed of paired mutant siblings, except for Emplate and his two sisters.
Enslavers of Seattle Core Quietus, Sugar Man
Horsemen of Apocalypse
The Infinites Mudir Rictor, Prelate Delgado, Prelate Gallo, Prelate Unus, the Vanisher. Genetically engineered army created by Sinister and the Beast. Squadrons of Infinites are led by a Prelate or Mudir.
The Madri Duplicates of Jamie Madrox, the Multiple Man in normal continuity
Marauders Arcade, Dirigible (Kingpin/Wilson Fisk), the Owl, Red (Norman Osborn) Human terrorists that have betrayed mankind.
The Pale Riders Damask (Alternate version of Emma Steed, Black Queen of London's Hellfire Club), Dead Man Wade (Deadpool), Danielle Moonstar A trio of assassins serving Apocalypse.
Altered Humans (Reavers in normal continuity) Clegg, Dead-Eye, Mangle, Donald Pierce, Slocum, Vultura. Humans enhanced by Apocalypse's techno-organic virus.
Stryfe Force Mikhail's Rasputin personal army. Formed by the best from his Upscale Program.
Absorbing Man and Diablo Two wardens in Apocalypse's prisoner camps in Mexico.
Bruce Banner/The Thing (The Incredible Hulk in Earth-616) A scientist of the Human High Council, secretly "bought" by Mikhail Rasputin, who supplies him with mutants for experiments in which Banner seeks to mutate himself.
Magma An assassin sent by Apocalypse to eliminate the Human High Council.
Keeper Murdock (Daredevil) Mikhail's personal warden. Responsible for watching over Empath, Mikhail's prisoner.
Rex Apocalypse's majordomo.
Shadow King Apocalypse's leading telepath
Strong Guy Implanted with a bomb and forced to serve Apocalypse. Betrays the X-Ternals.
Sebastian Shaw
Wolverine (not the same as Wolverine in normal continuity). A mutant altered by the Dark Beast and who serves Holocaust as his leading hunter.
Hellions Catseye, Jetstream, Roulette, Tarot, Beef, Bevatron A team of young mutants that were trained in the use of their powers to become Apocalypse's agents.

Neutrals

Team Members Notes
Avalon (the Savage Land) Cain (Juggernaut), Destiny, Douglas Ramsey (Cypher), and Wendy A haven for humans and mutants.
The Brood Misty Knight, Christopher Summers, Colleen Wing Humans transformed into Brood following the escape of Christopher Summers, who had been infected by a Brood Queen.
Heaven Angel, Karma, and Scarlett MacKenzie Nightclub run by Angel and its employees.
Prisoners in Sinister's Breeding Pens Artemis, Avalanche, Blob, Newt, Phantazia, Polaris, Pyro
Scavengers Cobra and Mister Hyde Cannibal mutates who plague graveyards and attack anyone, regardless of their allegiance.
Bullseye One of the many human prisoners aboard Mikhail Rasputin's ships.
Callisto Leader of a band of pirates.
Peter Corbeau A scientist and astronomer captured by Apocalypse and forced to serve him as his librarian.
Newell (Stingray) Captain of the Submarine Excalibur that transports refugees to Avalon.
John Proudstar (Thunderbird) Leader of Ghost Dance, an anti-Apocalypse cult and the first stage in the Infernal Gallop to Avalon.
Rossovich (Omega Red) An information broker.
Calvin Rankin (Mimic) A victim of Sugar Man's plague experiment.
Wolfsbane In her wild wolf form.
Morlocks Feral, Leech, Marrow, Skids, Danna Moonstar and Thornn Survivors of Mister Sinister's experiments.

Timeline escapees

At the end of the Age of Apocalypse storyline, Bishop travels back in time to prevent the timeline from ever occurring, which occurs simultaneously with a nuclear exchange between the Human High Council and Apocalypse.

Some characters escape the Age of Apocalypse into the Earth-616 continuity. These include Beast, Nate Grey (the Age of Apocalypse version of Cable), Holocaust (one of Apocalypse's horsemen), and Sugar Man. Nate Grey allies himself with the X-Men a few times, but later "dies" by disseminating into every life form on the Earth. Holocaust remains at large in the main Marvel Universe until he joins the Exiles and is killed by another universe's evil version of Hyperion.[1]

Beast and Sugar Man are sent twenty years into Earth-616's past. This allowed for several retcons which were used to explain that the Age of Apocalypse's Beast (now known as Dark Beast) was responsible for the creation of the Morlocks and also explain why Mister Sinister initiated the "Mutant Massacre" as he recognized his stolen handiwork and ordered it exterminated as a debasement of his art. Furthermore, Sugar Man gave advanced genetic research to the Genegineer of Genosha, allowing the small nation to become powerful by enslaving mutants.

Blink escapes into the Multiverse and joins & leads the reality-hopping team of heroes known as the Exiles. Her counterpart on Earth-616 has been dead since the "Phalanx Covenant" storyline.

Sabretooth survives through the same means as Blink and joins a team of reality-hopping super beings known as Weapon X. During one mission, he opts to stay behind on a world to raise David Richards. Eventually, he is brought back into action and joins the Exiles.

In Excalibur (vol. 3) #10, another survivor was revealed as Rastus, one of many wardens of Apocalypse. He joined forces with the Sugar Man and killed some Magistrates on Genosha before being killed by Callisto.

It was recently revealed that Wild Child had also left this timeline when a time-traveler Quentin Quire saved him from the Friends of Humanity and then used Wild Chid to replace the latter's counterpart, who had recently died.[citation needed]

Prequels

Before the ten year anniversary restored the Age of Apocalypse reality, it was considered a dead reality that no longer existed (A fact that was frequently mentioned by timline escapees, such as Sugarman and Blink.) However there were quite a few prequels written, that took place before its destruction.

Tales From the Age of Apocalypse were intended to be one-shot giant size issues that would chronicle a story from the past of each of the AoA titles. Unfortunately they got poor reception and only two were published. 'By the Light' featuring the Amazing X-men told the story of Blink transporting the X-men to the moon where they defeated Maximus the Mad Apocalypse's horseman of Death. "Sinister Bloodlines' featuring Factor X followed the return of a Brood infected Christopher Summers to Earth and his reunion, after escaping the expermentations of Sinister and Dark Beast, with Scott and Alex.

Blink was a four issue mini-series intended to reintroduce the AoA version of Blink as a teaser to the upcoming Exiles series. This story line takes place in the AoA timeline, but is largely set in a Negative Zone unaffected by the Fantastic Four. Blink becomes lost in the Negative Zone after attempting to incite Blastar towards war with Apocalypse and instead joins a rebellion against Blastaar alongside her lover, who turns out to be a de-evolved version of Annihilus.

X-man during its run occasionally re-visited the Age of Apocalypse both through time travel and flashbacks. X-man negative 1 shows Sinister releasing Nate from his growth vat as a child to check on his progress. In the X-man annual (1996) Sugarman uses a variation on a time machine powered by Nate's psionic force to return to the early years of Apocalypse's rule where he hopes to take control himself. Nate follows and meets up with Forge, Magneto, Morph and Mastermind and is surprised to discover that Forge knew that he would be there because an older Nate Grey had time traveled and told Forge about his memories of this event. On the orders of this older Nate Grey Forge forces younger Nate to re-power the machine and return himself and Sugarman to Earth 616. This leads to a rift between Forge and Magneto, who believed they should have allowed Nate to stay so that he could help them fight Apocalypse. Later, in X-man 53-54, Nate, Jean Grey and Cyclops run across a temporal rift that brings an infinite processing plant to Earth 616.

Ten-year anniversary

In 2005, Marvel published an Age of Apocalypse one-shot and miniseries to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the fan favorite event.

The one-shot features stories set before the events depicted in the original "Age of Apocalypse" event, similar in focus to the Chronicles of the Age of Apocalypse issues: the one-shot contains the story of how Colossus and Shadowcat left the X-Men to train Generation Next, how Sabretooth met Wild Child, the first appearance of the Silver Samurai, and how the world survived the Human High Council's nuclear attack.

The limited series, which takes place after the nuclear attack in X-Men: Omega, introduced several characters who weren't in the original storyline. Long time characters Cloak, Dagger, Psylocke, and the Morlocks (including Feral, Leech, Marrow, Skids, and Thornn), who where survivors of Mister Sinister's experiments, are introduced. Newer characters Beak, Icarus, and X-23 are seen along with an alternate version of Xorn. Jean Grey is also revealed to have saved everyone from the nuclear attack, and is revived from death by Sinister. She is also now displaying Phoenix Force-level powers.

The Exiles, two of which are from the Age of Apocalypse universe, visited the world as well during this time, the survival of which comes as a surprise to Blink and Sabretooth.

What If?

There had been various What If? issues revolving around the Age of Apocalypse:

  • In What If? (vol. 2) #77, Legion manages to kill Magneto just as he escapes from the concentration camp he was being held in. Due to Magneto's death, mutants become accepted by the public and the X-Men are mutant celebrities, although Xavier senses that something is wrong.
  • In What If? (vol. 2) #81, Tony Stark (a.k.a. Iron Man), head of the human resistance, joins up with Magneto to figure out a way to save Earth from the coming of Galactus. Among Tony’s fellow human freedom fighters are the Hulk, Sue Storm (a.k.a. Invisible Woman), and Gwen Stacy. Ultimately the survivors defeat Galactus by linking all minds on Earth (Human and Mutant) in to one psychic attack. They are left greatly hurt by Galactus, but feeling more unified and capable of stepping past the racism caused by Apocalypse's rule.
  • In 2006, Marvel published a What If? Age of Apocalypse one-shot which reveals what would have happened if both Xavier and Magneto were killed by Legion, leaving no one to form the X-Men. As explained by Uatu the Watcher, the governments of the world respond to the hundreds of deaths caused by Legion's attack by capturing mutants and sending them into concentration camps, causing non-mutant superhumans to flourish. Some mutants, such as Cyclops (who tore out his own eyes to pass as human) flee to the Savage Land. After Apocalypse conquers the world, he gains hundreds of mutant and superhuman followers including the Absorbing Man, Banshee, Cannonball, the Hulk, Holocaust, Juggernaut, Lady Deathstrike, Namor, the Scarlet Witch, Sebastian Shaw, clones of Spider-Man, Storm, and Sunspot. Apocalypse's Horsemen are Hulk, Juggernaut, Namor, and Storm. Apocalypse's followers destroy the mutant sanctuary in the Savage Land and only Sauron and Nate Summers escape. They join the Defenders, a group of heroes consisting of Brother Voodoo (the new Sorcerer Supreme), Captain America (wielding Mjolnir), Captain Britain (who uses Iron Man's armor), Colossus, the Molecule Man, the Thing (who uses a prosthetic arm), and Wolverine (who isn't bonded to any adamantium), who have learned the truth about their reality from the sacrifice of Doctor Strange. They have pledged not to change the past, but to overthrow Apocalypse in the present. As they fight back, Nate puts his own plans in motion to change the past, with tragic consequences. The majority of the Defenders are killed in the struggle against Apocalypse. Nate succeeds in killing Apocalypse with the help of the Molecule Man. Nate then garbs himself in Apocalypse's armor and uses the stolen Eye of Agamotto to open a time portal into the past to stop Legion's actions. Captain America unleashes a bolt from Mjolnir that kills Nate and he and Wolverine walk off. Uatu reveals that by trying to change the past, Nate merely caused events to repeat themselves in yet another reality, as the lightning bolt destroyed Legion, Xavier, Magneto, and hundreds of others. He mentions that this problem is spreading like a cancer across the multiverse, as reality after reality turns into an Age of Apocalypse.

Other Media

Television

  • An Age of Apocalypse-like timeline is shown in the episode "One Man's Worth" of X-Men: The Animated Series. The death of Xavier at the hands of Fitzroy during his college years cause a destructive Mutant-Human War, with Magneto leading the Mutant Resistance against the mutant-hunting Avengers. Some of the mutants are shown in their Age of Apocalypse costume from the comics.
  • In Wolverine and the X-Men animated series, after the X-Men accomplish their mission in the present to avoid a world ruled by Sentinels, a variant of the Age of Apocalypse reality is shown in the final episode of the first season.
  • In "X-Men: Evolution" Apocalypse is unleashed in the episode "Dark Horizon part 2"

The age begins, and takes place throghout season 4. It ends in the episode "Ascension part 2" The characters do not appear in their Age of Apocalypse suits though.

Video games

X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse is heavily influenced by the Age of Apocalypse storyline, including several characters and concepts from the storyline.

Trading cards

In the VS System Trading Card Game, a series of exclusive cards were recently released as prizes and participation awards in various tournaments. These cards were themed around the Age of Apocalypse, and a number of cards in the set that printed with the Horsemen of Apocalypse team affiliation.[2]

References

External links