WHO IS MAJOR X?
• A mysterious new player enters the Marvel Universe and the X-Men are in his crosshairs!
• What is his mission and how can the man known as Cable hope to stop him?
• Writer/artist Rob Liefeld introduces a new wrinkle in the saga of Marvel's Mightiest Mutants!
• The Mystery of MAJOR X continues in issue #2 as he forges a union with Cable - and races against time to save mutantkind from certain devastation!
Rated T+
Major X continues to be a most pleasant surprise. Read Full Review
This is a issue that decreases a little bit the intensity compared to the previous one, here we already know much better about the X-Istence and we even got to know who is the architect of everything: The X-Ential, and the reasons that led Major X back to the past searching of his father: Cable, will this pair be enough to save the mutants from extinction once more? It does not seem something easy to achieve. Read Full Review
Major X is a summer disaster film. It's all about concepts and visuals but lacks a depth and clearer narrative that would elevate the product. It's fun in a throwback to the 90s way and I'm sure if I read this back then my teenage self would be bouncing off the walls with excitement. But my tastes have grown since then and I want a bit more from my entertainment. Liefeld is a great idea man but this series is showing that he's best when working with a master storyteller. Read Full Review
This second issue is a step in the right direction after the abysmal debut of this series, but it still is not good. The addition of Brent Peebles on art is a major plus, but Rob Liefelds story needs more focus and after two issues, I am far from sold on his new character. I will give this one more issue before deciding if Ill continue on, but I will really need to be wowed next issue for that to happen. Read Full Review
The X-Treme 90s is dead and we should let it rest. Major X #2 shows us why Read Full Review
A lot of very familiar world-building, combined with endless tough guy dialogue and a big nonsensical fighty-fighty makes for one dull comic book. Read Full Review
Better than the last issue, both story and art-wise, but still a massive train wreck.
what does it exist for ?!
I like the part in the middle where Jordan White and Annalise Bissa ran out of time to edit (or #@$%s to give) and let some painful 9th-grade vocabulary mistakes slip through. "Convoy" instead of "envoy," "procured" instead of "explored," and "atmospheric beauty."
This wasn't as bad as issue one simply because it went by a lot faster and there wasn't any needlessly complicated pacing. It was all exposition still, and rather boring, but it wasn't as much of a train wreck.