X-Men: Battle of the Atom #1 |
Marvel did a good job of labeling each chapter in the story so readers wouldn't have to figure out what order to read the comics in. The downside was that if you didn't currently read all of the X-titles, you were pretty much forced to buy all of them to fully understand what's going on. There was little to no distinction with the characters from book to book. For example, if you currently only read Wolverine and the X-Men, you didn't get a story featuring the title's regular characters. You got the next chapter of the "Battle of the Atom" storyline, most likely featuring the original five teenage X-Men and/or their future counterparts. Bookending the storyline was a two-issue X-Men: Battle of the Atom limited series.
X-Men #5 |
Like most of Marvel's major "events" of late, nothing really dramatic or drastic occurs at the conclusion of "Battle of the Atom." Some may disagree, but to me it's nothing when compared to crossover events like Marvel's Secret Wars in 1984 that gave us Spider-Man's new black costume or the She-Hulk replacing long-time Fantastic Four member The Thing while he stays on Battleworld in his own monthly series. Or even when compared to House of M when the Scarlet Witch declared "No More Mutants." And it's certainly nothing like DC's Crisis on Infinite Earths or Flashpoint that changed things "forever" in the DC Universe.
Uncanny X-Men #139 |
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