Good lord this was bad. I was torn between 1 and 2 stars, and leaned toward 2 because a) there was still some good buried in there, b) I felt bad giving anything 1 star, and c) I think I was more bothered because it felt like this was using poor use of pieces from good series. This takes characters from Marauders, X-Factor, and Hellions, all of which I loved, and uses them very poorly.
My first recommendation is to maybe skip this book for now. Or read it online or from the library. It was not fun. The characters didn’t feel like themselves. A lot of the powers are really hard to follow. Somnus in particular seems kind of useless, though I love his design. Tempo is also hard to understand how her powers are supposed to work. Kate and Kwannon feel the most “off” compared to their last incarnations. And I got so sick of Kate talking about the Marauders being a family in the annual. Her dialogue in particular was atrocious.
My second recommendation is to read the backup story first. It’s the Marvel Voices: Pride story about Somnus and his backstory. Which is a cute concept, but doesn’t really make sense. He’s a gay man from the 60s who recently died and was given a second chance at life by Daken because they spent a night together that turned into several years, thanks to Somnus’s power. Since Somnus never came out in his life, Daken gets him resurrected on Krakoa so he can live as an out gay man.
However, there seems to be zero adjustment period. In what seems to be his second appearance in a Marvel comic, he’s fully out and proud. Which is great from a representation standpoint, it just is narratively confusing. Plus Steve Orlando gives him several moments that are kind of indulging in that. He gets like a page and a half dedicated to having a crush on a character from a tv show he remembers. They constantly are referencing his relationship with Daken (who they almost exclusively refer to as Akihiro, which I can’t remember if there’s a reason for or not). I normally would love seeing all this on the page, but in a book that has so much going on, it takes up space that was sorely needed.
Which brings up my next issue. There’s no space for anything happening in this book. Cassandra Nova is brought back for almost no reason that I can discern other than shock value. There are 8 lead characters (Kate, Bishop, Tempo, Aurora, Akihiro, Psylocke, Somnus, and Cassandra), plus members of the Shi’ar, and they manage to introduce a bunch of new characters with this Kin Crimson plot. There is so much going on that none of it feels fleshed out, none of it makes full sense, and it is disappointing.
The art doesn’t help at all. It’s often muddled, and focused on looking like stuff is happening without making it super clear. Eleanora Carlini has talent, there are some panels that are a nice pose or composition, and Matt Milla’s colors really work, but it’s so muddy and hard to make out what is supposed to be happening that it becomes frustrating. I liked Andrea Broccardo on issue 5 was probably the best, but I was already so annoyed by everything going on in the title that it didn’t help. Especially when ANOTHER new character got introduced in the last page. Creees Lee was alright on the annual, but, again, I was distracted by these characters not feeling correct and being annoying.
Which then brings us to the actual story, which is utter garbage. There’s a “mystery box” that is 2 BILLION years old. First off. That’s just ludicrous at that point. Then the actual mystery is one that makes little to no sense. There’s an idea of “the first blood spilled” that required a secret cabal of powerful Shi’ar warriors to protect and wipe out from memory. Turns out, the horrible secret of this literal space empire is that they tried to kill off a bunch of mutants on earth 2 billion (again, BILLION) years ago and lost. It’s a dumb mystery with no payoff. Like we knew that it would have something to do with killing mutants. It was pretty much exactly what I expected without any unexpected twist. Except maybe for the fact that the Shi’ar lost. But again, not nearly enough to be something that required all this extra stuff to hide for billions of years.
The one good thing to come out of this is that apparently there were 10 things being kept secret by the Kin Crimson. Only 3 were defined, so that leaves another 7 plot threads that could be picked up in hopefully better stories.
I’ve rambled on long enough. I could probably keep complaining about various aspects. I think it’s more disappointment than anything. It’s a great cast with a lot of potential and a queer writer at the helm, but it just did not work. Maybe this just means there’s nowhere to go but up. One can hope.