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The New Age of Apocalypse #1-6

X-Men: New Age Of Apocalypse

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Collects X-Men: Age of Apocalypse (2005) #1-6 and the X-Men: Age of Apocalypse one-shot.

Now that Apocalypse has been destroyed and the end of the world has been averted, what could possibly pose a threat to Magneto and his X-Men? Well, perhaps Sinister and whatever massive force he has just unleashed is enough to rile the X-Men and cause them to seek out a since retired Weapon X! Plus: Revisit the AoA world with four original tales featuring characters you know and love: the origin of Generation Next, the first meeting of Sabretooth and Wild Child, Weapon X's first run-in with Mariko Yashida in Japan, and the story of how the AoA world survived the nuclear holocaust that threatened it!

175 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 3, 2005

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86 people want to read

About the author

Akira Yoshida

93 books7 followers
Pseudonym of C.B. Cebulski

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5 stars
22 (9%)
4 stars
42 (18%)
3 stars
98 (42%)
2 stars
57 (24%)
1 star
12 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews
Profile Image for Terence.
1,169 reviews390 followers
October 29, 2022
The new Age of Apocalypse revisits the dystopian future world in the 10 year anniversary of the original series. A year has passed and Magneto's X-Men are aiding humans while hunting down mutants who worked for Apocalypse.
description

This was simply a story that didn't need to be told. There was no reason to revisit the Age of Apocalypse after it was supposed to wiped away. The whole story can be summed up as hunt down the enemy with a twist. It also featured some new characters like a version of X-23.
description
I was wondering why the rating was so low and I get it now. This is OK at best.

2.5 out of 5 stars
Profile Image for Caleb Abel.
Author 2 books3 followers
August 23, 2019
Unnecessary and confusing. They decided to return to the Age of Apocalypse timeline for a 10th anniversary limited series, but they set it during a time that I thought was erased at the end of the original AoA event.

It wasn't terrible, but if they wanted to do this, I wish they had just done it as more of a prequel to the earlier years between Xavier's death and Apocalypse's rise instead of setting it in a timeline that appeared to be erased when the original event wrapped up.
Profile Image for Trieu.
39 reviews4 followers
February 7, 2015
I agree with some of the other reviewers that this book probably could've gone unwritten. It seems like a cheap way for Marvel to make more money out of AoA. Nonetheless, I enjoyed the fun read and the artwork was top notch. The tone is completely different from AoA, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. The ultimate war is over after all. There were plenty of badass fighting scenes that I really enjoyed. I read it digitally but now I'm highly considering buying the entire book or at least issue #6 of the series.
Profile Image for La Revistería Comics.
1,604 reviews89 followers
March 26, 2015
Si pensabas que el bombardeo atómico había acabado con todos los personajes de la Era de Apocalipsis en aquel mítico final de la primera saga... tenías razón. Pero no tanta, ya que con una interesante vuelta de tuerca este recopilatorio muestra el día después de aquel redundante final apocalíptico y la paz y la muerte esa lejos de llegar para todos.
Profile Image for John Ekleberry.
39 reviews
May 15, 2012
My enjoyment of the current AoA series gave me the push to finally read this series that I passed on back in '05. I wish I would have left it in the past where it belongs. The flashback one-shot is OK, but the mini-series is dreadful.
Profile Image for Jase.
470 reviews5 followers
March 12, 2013
I had to read this again because the art is AMAZING! The first part covers what happened to all those guys in the older parts of the story (from the 1990s). Chris Bachalo does what I consider his best work so far.
Profile Image for Joey.
136 reviews
August 5, 2021
Interesting, compelling addition epilogue to AoA, but the art style at times felt weird.
Profile Image for M Pereira.
666 reviews13 followers
April 9, 2023
What can I say: I think this may be the greatest storyline of all Marvel. The greatest counterfactual: Magneto a great hero, even taking the faustian bargain he shows his leadership and virtue through a flawed decision. Truly a great collection of stories and the last few short stories great filler material too.
157 reviews15 followers
February 21, 2021
Did not accomplish anything plotwise and did not fit with the endning of the original Age of Apocalypse-storyline.
Profile Image for Daniel.
1,205 reviews8 followers
November 3, 2023
I liked it. Art had its moments, mostly. There was one drawing of Wolverine that was so bizarre. . . The story was great, though.
152 reviews
November 28, 2015
Okay. So, I gave this book four stars, because there were elements of it that I absolutely LOVED, and others that made me go, "Huh?" I'll break it down into the pros and cons/continuity glitches:

Pros:
-It's the return of the Age of Apocalypse! As AoA is my favorite X-Men storyline of all time, getting to see this world and its characters again will always appeal to me and lead me to snatch up all of the issues I can.
-Bringing in a bunch of new characters was entertaining. I especially liked the redesign of Wolfsbane, the inclusion of the Massachusetts Academy and the Morlocks, and Psylocke joining the fray.
-This story is lighter in tone, in a lot of ways, than the original Age of Apocalypse, allowing them to experience some success and applause from the general populace as heroes, which was nice after all the horrors they'd previously been through.
-Chris Bachalo is on art!!! I love everything Bachalo has done in the X-books, and this is no exception.
-The plot involves some moments of levity, some mystery, the hunting down of Apocalypse's former lieutenants, and some clever reveals!

Cons/Continuity Issues:
-Why exactly is Psylocke apparently a ninja again? Assuming how much was likely to be different between the AoA and the main Marvel Universe, why would Psylocke and Revanche have still switched bodies (which is what I assumed was implied by her appearance)?
-I'm okay with Kirika... but it seemed a little bit too much like X-23 to feel like a new, interesting character.
-The disappearance of several X-Men and their allies who weren't dead by the end of the original AoA story was frustrating. Sure, the companion encyclopedia says that Exodus, Wild Child, Morph, and Iceman were "Missing in Action" when they went on a mysterious mission, I think that was just a sloppy way of removing their characters because the writer didn't know what to do with them -- especially when two of them reappeared during Remender's Dark Angel saga and the others never returned again with no explanation.
-Why was Magneto so willing to make a deal with Sinister? Why would he CARE if people knew who'd really stopped the bombs from wiping out America, considering it was another hero?
-Considering the X-Men knew that Sinister had brainwashed his "Sinister Six," they sure seemed willing to kill off several of them, even though they were unwilling pawns, which doesn't really match what I would expect of them.

I really did enjoy this return visit to the Age of Apocalypse quite a lot -- I just wish that they'd done a little more explaining on certain subjects/characters.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Shannon Appelcline.
Author 30 books169 followers
July 9, 2018
The one-shot has a whole bunch of stories that didn’t need to be told (e.g,. how Kitty and Peter became the teachers of Generation Next), that are generally competent, followed by a story that’s really only an incomplete teaser [4/10]. The New Age of Apocalypse proper was better than I expected. The author makes the tone a bit too light sometimes (particularly in X-23’s attitude and in a football game that the X-Men play) and introduces too many “new” superhumans, but overall offers an interesting way forward following the bombs at the end of Age [6/10].

Before I read this, I was also wondering if this volume would be in the canon of the Age of Apocalypse that's returned in the '10s. After reading it, I'm pretty sure the answer is yes.
Profile Image for Lincoln.
Author 25 books40 followers
January 17, 2008
The only thing I liked about it was that it was at least a return to the AoA, which I had been jonesing for the entire decade since the original.

Jean Grey's involvement and Magneto's cover-up I can deal with; I could see that happening. And the whole deal with the Guthries. What really sucked ass was all the AoA versions of all the new characters that had cropped up in the main universe since X-Men Prime a decade earlier. Xorn, Beak, etc. And why the fuck was Psylocke Asian in AoA!?

I would have done a waaaaay better job with this.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Evan.
746 reviews14 followers
August 16, 2008
I'm sure to be disappointed by this, as it revisits the original 90s storyline that brought me into comics...

And BOY was I right. The "untold" tales portion worked okay, but to completely annul the ending of the original was just awful. Part of the reason why the original AOA crossover has remained (mostly) beloved is because the original ending (not to mention the scads of main-character deaths that preceded it) was so bleak and somewhat daring for its time.
3,014 reviews
March 16, 2015
This wasn't bad.

It's presumptuous to return to the 90's surprisiest breakout. I mean, everything about it is a gimmick. But are there are any mainstream 90's stories more beloved than Age of Apocalypse? Really. I'm curious.

Here, we see there is little left to tell. So there's a kind of weird denouement twist that gets resolved. I'm not sure the twist is fully plausible.

It's not a bad story. It's just neither necessary nor does it add anything.
Profile Image for Ruddy.
34 reviews3 followers
July 31, 2007
Going back to the Age of Apocalypse was a little weird i think. I mean, when they finished the first series it was such a huge endind that it did not seem like anything could happen after that. Basically the story is half ass, more like a "what if" to me...BUT i would buy any comic that is penciled by Chris Bachalo. And thats the main reason why I bought this.
Profile Image for M.
1,681 reviews17 followers
August 1, 2011
Revisiting the Age of Apocalypse years later, this storyline is a convoluted coda to an epic saga. Introducing new characters, rehashing old plots, and trying to shoehorn in characters that missed the first go-round reveals that more is not always better.
Profile Image for Angela.
2,595 reviews71 followers
July 11, 2013
This is the story of what happened in this alternate universe after they succeeded in changing the timeline for our universe. Magneto is in charge and is hunting the baddies. A good idea that expands on some aspects of the Apocalypse storyline. A good read.
Profile Image for Petalbooks.
244 reviews2 followers
December 6, 2007
Distratcing anime-tastic renditions of what the!!?! I was looking for the old skool AoA, instead the library served this one up.
Profile Image for Dennis.
5 reviews4 followers
January 4, 2009
Anniversary or not, NEVER should have been written.
Profile Image for Rhiannon.
195 reviews8 followers
March 8, 2009
Enjoyable for the opportunity to see more AoA (about my favorite X-Men arc/'verse ever), but could have been executed better.
Profile Image for Seamus O'Keeffe.
74 reviews
March 28, 2015
Am a bit biased cause I love any opportunity to read stories from the AoA universe. Yes the story is far from perfect but there are some great ideas here.
Profile Image for Enrique Peral.
107 reviews4 followers
May 26, 2015
Continuación de la "AoA" original, con motivo de su 10º aniversario.
Profile Image for Frans Kempe.
2,785 reviews11 followers
April 20, 2017
A story in the AoA universe taking place a year after Apocalypse has died. The X-men are cleaning up the last of Apocalypse minions. We find out what happened with the nuclear blast and the fate of Sinister and Jean Grey. Good story all in all.
Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews

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