Some backstory on myself before jumping into this: I have read various different Marvel comic issues in the past (during my childhood and adolescence), mostly just the odd comic here and there that I may have seen at a comic store or at the library. This is my first dive back in, and I started with this issue in particular due to my interest in the X-Men animated series and, more recently, X-Men 97 (which I adored), as well as from recommendations online regarding a good entry point for the X-Men comics. I love the characters within X-Men, I love the themes, the diversity, and I love the clear allegories to discrimination, oppression and marginalisation that have always been on display since it's inception. So, here I am.
This issue has somewhat of a legendary history to it. It was the first issue in five years to actually contain a new X-Men story, and it is now considered the starting point for what ultimately revitalised the X-Men franchise with the now legendary Chris Claremont run that followed this. Needless to say that I was very excited to jump in and see how this all started.
To begin with, I absolutely loved the art and the colour usage. There were so many unique and visually-appealing panels, and I loved the use of blanket colours to backgrounds and characters at times in order to convey certain emotions within those panels. I also loved how rough and brushed certain panels looked, especially ones involving Storm and the weather. Overall, just a beautiful comic to take in.
I won't get into the plot for spoiler reasons, but it was serviceable. There was some good writing here, that connected me to the characters and to what was going on, however, don't go into this expecting anything too deep. For the most part, it felt to me almost like a character showcase for the new team more than anything (which is handled well). And while I can appreciate the sheer diversity of the new team, especially considering the time period in which this originally released (1975), I have to point out the potentially problematic character stereotypes on display. Thunderbird, in particular, might be the worst offender here. He is defined almost entirely through his heritage, and not much else. I understand this is a product of its time, but it still feels worth mentioning.
If I were to hand this issue to the average person on the street, I'm not sure the overall response to it would be anything of a necessarily groundbreaking nature, per-se, however, I have to give props to everything this does right, along with what this started off for the franchise. All in all, I will say that I very much enjoyed this issue and I am certainly excited to read on with Uncanny X-Men.
My review score for this is: 3.5 stars (rounded up to 4)