


X-Men #2 (1991)
X-Men #2 (1991 1st)
Direct Edition. Cover pencils by Jim Lee, inks by Scott Williams. Firestorm, script by Jim Lee (Co-Plotter) and Chris Claremont, pencils by Jim Lee inks by Scott Williams; The Prof and X-Men Blue are captured and taken to Asteroid M; Magneto discovers that Moira altered his genetic structure when he was a child in her care; The rest of the X-Folk are told they must rescue their team-mates before the Magneto Protocols are implemented.
X-Men #2 (1991 1st)
Direct Edition. Cover pencils by Jim Lee, inks by Scott Williams. Firestorm, script by Jim Lee (Co-Plotter) and Chris Claremont, pencils by Jim Lee inks by Scott Williams; The Prof and X-Men Blue are captured and taken to Asteroid M; Magneto discovers that Moira altered his genetic structure when he was a child in her care; The rest of the X-Folk are told they must rescue their team-mates before the Magneto Protocols are implemented.
X-Men #2 (1991 1st)
Direct Edition. Cover pencils by Jim Lee, inks by Scott Williams. Firestorm, script by Jim Lee (Co-Plotter) and Chris Claremont, pencils by Jim Lee inks by Scott Williams; The Prof and X-Men Blue are captured and taken to Asteroid M; Magneto discovers that Moira altered his genetic structure when he was a child in her care; The rest of the X-Folk are told they must rescue their team-mates before the Magneto Protocols are implemented.
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Key Features:
Second appearance of Omega Red
Early appearance of the newly formed Blue Team
Follow-up to the record-breaking X-Men #1
Direct edition
Creative Team:
Writer: Chris Claremont
Pencils: Jim Lee
Inks: Scott Williams
Cover Art: Jim Lee
Story Summary:
Picking up immediately after the explosive debut issue, this chapter deepens the mystery surrounding Omega Red, a deadly Russian mutant resurrected to hunt down Wolverine and the X-Men. The newly split Blue and Gold Teams begin operating independently, and Cyclops' Blue Team takes center stage. As Omega Red attacks, the team faces his lethal powers and growing internal friction. Jim Lee’s iconic art continues to define the early '90s era of the X-Men with cinematic action and bold redesigns.