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Inferno by Jonathan Hickman
Inferno by Jonathan Hickman













The text pages updating us on Orchis’ aggressive advances in scale and the mutants’ failed attempts at attacking the Orchis Forge do a nice job of establishing that the stakes have been raised and many things have been happening since we left off from Hickman’s X-Men series.The cover of Inferno #2 seems to directly refer to this sequence, but given Hickman’s aversion to covers that spoil plot action it’s probably like how a few covers of Powers of X referred to plot from previous issues. A cool bit of symmetry and foreshadowing.

Inferno by Jonathan Hickman Inferno by Jonathan Hickman

  • The opening sequence calls back to the opening of House of X, but with Emma Frost reviving Xavier and Magneto.
  • I’m still a little sore about that possibility, but the first issue of Inferno is such a strong and exciting start to paying off plot threads started in House of X and Powers of X that whatever happens down the line, this story will probably feel like a satisfying conclusion.

    Inferno by Jonathan Hickman

    Before reading this issue I had a feeling of vague dread about it, nervous that the end of Jonathan Hickman’s run on X-Men was premature and a bad compromise that kept more mediocre comics moving along while denying the promise of what we had been told was a long term three act story.















    Inferno by Jonathan Hickman