History
Anti-Mutant Propaganda Rising[]
With the proliferation of mutant births, anti-mutant sentiment grew. And without anyone to unite mutants or create a poster organization for mutant superheroes, mutants were only seen as a liability and a danger.
Anti-mutant protests and rallies sprang up all over the United States and often turned violent. During the March for Purity on Washington, D.C., mutant-rights advocate Dr. Henry McCoy was savagely beaten to death by anti-mutant protesters.[1]
Albany[]
Anti-mutant sentiment finally gained legal traction after a young mutant girl's powers manifested in a fiery explosion. Reports said the explosion looked like a phoenix. The explosion leveled Albany, New York, and killed approximately 600,000.[2] Mutants around the world still recognize Albany as a pivotal event.[3]
The Decimation[]
After the Albany incident put a face on "the mutant threat" and paved the way for anti-mutant legislation, the U.S. government sanctioned the creation of mutant-hunting robots, the Exonims.[3]
Exonims went into mass production and began running operations (such as Clean-Sweep,[4][5]) to round up mutants and human relatives of mutants. Mutants were arrested or killed on sight. In the months that followed, the mutant population dropped drastically. This sharp decline in the mutant population became known as The Decimation.[5]
With mutants being executed by the thousands in places like Alcatraz[3] and by Exonims in the streets, human families of mutants were next to be targeted. X-Gene carriers were offered two options: sterilization or imprisonment. Researchers were commissioned to develop a "cure" for mutancy.[3]
In other countries, mutants did not fare any better. The United Kingdom attempted to exile their mutant population to a small island off the north coast of Ireland. However, the ships never made it to their destination: one was bombed by Irish separatists, most of them turned back, and the last was liberated by the Mutant Liberation Front, and most of the mutants escaped into Canada and the United States.
Those aiding or protecting mutants were arrested as well. The popular superhero team the Fantastic Four was publicly arrested for harboring a mutant fugitive. Sue Storm herself reported the incident after the mutant injured her son Franklin.[6]
Fortress X[]
In the midst of anti-mutant hysteria, the mutant "terrorist" known as Magneto organized several efforts to liberate mutants including campaigns in San Francisco, Genosha, Baton Rouge, and New York City. Magneto was also a key figure in founding mutants rights organizations like the Brotherhood and Acolytes.[7]
In a show of force and to rally his fellow mutants, Magneto used his control of magnetism to literally steal multiple structures from Manhattan (including the Chrysler Building, Empire State Building and Grand Central Station) and create a safe haven for mutants, Fortress X,[3] and invited mutants to join him in the last stand of mutantkind.
Following numerous terrorist acts by Magneto and his followers, the U.S. government assembled an elite team of hero humans to hunt down these last mutants. The new team was dubbed the Avengers.[8]
The Avengers were tasked with penetrating Fortress X and detonating a chemical bomb to wipe out the mutants. However, the Avengers experienced a change of heart after witnessing the plight of the mutants in Fortress X and reneged on their mission. They died fighting to stop Hulk from detonating the bomb and inadvertently gave the mutants the key to their survival. Having witnessed Susan Storm using her force-field powers, a group of telekinetic mutants that would become known as the Force Warriors used their powers to replicate hers and create a barrier around Fortress X to ward off human attackers.[9]
The Siege of Fortress X[]
The human forces laid siege to Fortress X. For 1000 days, the U.S. military spent hours each day breaking down the barrier surrounding Fortress X, and the mutants protecting the fortress would fight them off while the Force Warriors re-applied the barrier. However, the residents of Fortress X began to realize that something was wrong. Basilisk, a Fortress X mutant who collected dog-tags he claimed from the bodies of soldiers he had killed, found one dog-tag identical to the one he had collected months earlier, belonging to two completely different people. The biggest hint that something was wrong came when Katherine Pryde, a mutant with the ability to phase through matter, exited the barrier with a camera to take pictures of the outside world. The pictures were blank, and Katherine claimed that the world outside of the barrier didn't exist.[10][11]
This led to dissent inside of Fortress X, as Legacy began investigating the curious events against Magneto's express wishes, with the help of Gambit. Magneto seemingly killed the two, crushing them under a ton of rubble, but in fact staged their deaths and secured them underground, so that they could investigate the matter without everyone else finding out. Magneto had been disturbed by the discovery of a room detailed in the plans for Fortress X that he had no memory of. He dispatched Gambit and Legacy to find the room. Inside the room they found a box containing the universe, realizing that the fabric of reality had been altered.[12][13]
Reality Crumbles[]
While Gambit and Legacy searched for the hidden room, Magneto entered the brig, liberated Katherine Pryde, and woke Charles Xavier, a telepathic mutant kept in an artificial coma because telepaths remembered reality as it had been before it was altered. Just as Xavier was about to explain everything to Magneto, Magneto was knocked out by the Force Warriors, who declared Magneto a traitor and assumed control of Fortress X.[13]
Meanwhile, Gambit and Legacy were confronted by Moira, who revealed that she was behind the alteration of reality. Outside the Fortress, the mutants had assembled to fight off the human coalition forces just as they did every day. Only this day, the humans didn't show up. Tired of taking orders and determined to get to the bottom of the mysteries plaguing Fortress X, Basilisk disobeyed orders and went in search of answers, with more mutants following him.[14]
Xavier proceeded to telepathically reveal the truth to everyone: that David Haller, a member of the Force Warriors, was his son and that the entirety of Fortress X was his creation. In the old reality, Xavier and Doctor Nemesis had been attempting to cure David of his multiple-personality disorder by removing the personalities from David's mind. This caused the emergence of a new, reality-warping personality that assumed the shape of Moira Kinross and altered reality, creating the world of Fortress X where David was a beloved hero. Xavier revealed that, rather than 1000 days, no more than 7 days had actually passed.[12]
Enraged at the mutants disobeying her, Moira created a massive human army that began assaulting Fortress X. Moira went to destroy the box containing the rest of reality while the mutants fought the invading army, but was stopped by Katherine Pryde, who stole the box before Moira could toss it into a fire. As Moira knocked out Katherine, along with Xavier and Magneto, David appeared. Moira pleaded with him to give her another chance to create a new, better reality, but David instead re-absorbed her and her powers. Using the ability to warp reality, David restored it to its original state.[15][13]
Aftermath[]
When David restored reality to its original state, the process was not fault-free. Everyone maintained their memories of the altered reality, and some, such as Chamber, Nightmare and Revenant, were changed as a result of the reality alteration. Most chose to have their memories of Fortress X and the altered reality expunged, returning to their old selves, while others such as Frenzy and Legacy chose to keep their memories.[14] [16]
Destruction[]
It was later revealed that the reality lived on but was destroyed by the Incursions phenomenon.[17]Residents
Living Residents[]
Also include characters with unrevealed fates.
- Mutant Resistance
- Angel (Warren Worthington III)[10]
- Amelia C. Voght
- Angel Salvadore
- Anole (Victor Borkowski)[10]
- Avalanche (Dominikos Petrakis)[3]
- Basilisk (Scott Summers)[3]
- Berserker (James Proudstar)[3]
- Bling! (Roxy Washington)[10]
- Box (Madison Jeffries)[11]
- Cecilia Reyes[3]
- Chamber (Jono Starsmore)[3]
- Colossus (Piotr Rasputin)[3]
- Danger[10]
- Dazzler (Alison Bliare)[3]
- Forge[3]
- ForgetMeNot[18]
- Frenzy (Joanna Cargill)[10]
- Force Warriors[10]
- Gambit (Remy LeBeau)[10]
- Husk (Paige Guthrie)[3]
- Iceman (Robert "Bobby" Drake)
- Logan[3]
- Jubilee (Jubilation Lee)[3]
- Dr. Kavita Rao[3]
- Legacy (Anna-Marie Darkhölme)[10]
- Loa (Alani Ryan)[10]
- Magneto (Max Eisenhardt)[3]
- Martinique Wyngarde[3]
- Moonstar Cadre
- Jack Wayne
- Moria Kinross[10]
- Namor[3]
- Gentle (Nezhno Abidemi)[10]
- Nightmare (Megan Gwynn)[3]
- Northstar (Jean-Paul Beaubier)[10]
- Regan Wyngarde[3]
- Rockslide (Santo Vaccarro)[3]
- Sofia Mantega[20]
- Sidney Green[20]
- Storm (Ororo Munroe)[3]
- Surge (Nori Ashida)
- Scalphunter (John Greycrow)
- Tempo Cadre
- Toad (Mortimer Toynbee)[3]
- Trance (Hope Abbott)[3]
- X[3]
- Callisto[3]
- Velocidad (Gabriel Cohuelo)
- Vertigo
- Numerous unidentified mutants (Legion Subpersonalities, including Jack Wayne)
- Eileen Haloke[21]
- Fantastic Four[6]
- X-Brig Prisoners
- Franklin Richards[6]
- Gabriel Summers[7]
- Government and Military (Human Coalition/United States Army)
- Jason Wyngarde[20]
- Masque[3]
- Stephen Strange
- MJ Watson
- Spider-Man (Peter Parker)
Deceased Residents[]
- Avengers[8]
- Aurora (Jeanne-Marie Beaubier)[10]
- Blob (Freddie Dukes)[23]
- Summers' father[7]
- Summers' mother[7]
- Alex Summers[7]
- Copycat (Vanessa Carlysle)[24]
- Feral (Maria Callasantos)[10]
- Guthrie family[3]
- Dr. Henry McCoy[1]
- Irene Adler[7]
- Joshua Foley
- Kurt[10]
- Lorna Dane[7]
- Madrox[10]
- Maggott (Japheth)[23]
- Mammomax (Maximus Jensen)[23]
- Marrow (Sarah)[23]
- Mister Sinister (Nathaniel Essex)[23]
- Mystique (Raven Darkhölme)[10][7]
- Omega Red (Arkady Rossovich)[23]
- Neophyte (Simon Hall)[7]
- Pyro (St. John Allerdyce)[23]
- Pietro Maximoff[5]
- Phoenix (Jean Grey)[2]
- Prison Governor Arcade (Harcourt Teesdale)[3]
- Rahne Sinclair[6]
- Dr. Richard Palance[3]
- Tempo (Heather Tucker)[10]
- Wanda Maximoff[5]
- Weapon S/Sabertooth (Victor Creed)[10]
- John Proudstar[20]
- Bethany Proudstar[20]
Notes
- Prior to being given an official reality number, this universe was referred as Earth-TRN016 as a part of our Temporary Reality Numbers classification system.
- Along with comics, Mike Carey released four communiques to CBR: Age of X Communiques: Cannonball, Gambit, Revenant, Frenzy, Magma, Cypher, Magneto, Basilisk, Legacy, Berserker, Hellion, Nightmare.
Trivia
- Because Wanda Maximoff died before decreeing "No more mutants" on M-Day, numerous mutants retained their X-Genes and powers. The Decimation was on this world caused by anti-mutants operations, wiping out most of the mutant population.
- Telepaths were the only individuals unaffected by Legion's reality warp, which is why they were kept from using their powers in the new reality.
- List of Living Mutants from Age of X
- Human Coalition Members (Age of X)
See Also
- 23 appearance(s) of Earth-11326
- 5 mention(s) of Earth-11326
- 2 mention(s) in handbook(s) of Earth-11326
- 255 image(s) of Earth-11326
- 163 characters that originate from Earth-11326
- 16 teams that originate from Earth-11326
- 6 organizations that originate from Earth-11326
- 3 locations that originate from Earth-11326
- 1 items that originate from Earth-11326
Links and References
- Age of X Communiques: Cannonball, Gambit, Revenant
- Age of X Communiques: Frenzy, Magma, Cypher
- Age of X Communiques: Magneto, Basilisk, Legacy
- Age of X Communiques: Berserker, Hellion, Nightmare
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Age of X: Historical Log #1
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Age of X: Historical Log #2
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 3.24 3.25 3.26 3.27 3.28 3.29 3.30 3.31 3.32 3.33 3.34 3.35 3.36 3.37 3.38 3.39 Age of X: Alpha #1
- ↑ Age of X Communiqués #1–4
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Age of X: Historical Log #3
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 Age of X: Historical Log #4
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 7.9 Age of X Communiqués #1
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 Age of X: Historical Log #5
- ↑ Age of X: Universe #2
- ↑ 10.00 10.01 10.02 10.03 10.04 10.05 10.06 10.07 10.08 10.09 10.10 10.11 10.12 10.13 10.14 10.15 10.16 10.17 10.18 10.19 10.20 10.21 10.22 10.23 10.24 10.25 10.26 10.27 10.28 10.29 10.30 X-Men: Legacy #245
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 New Mutants (Vol. 3) #22
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 X-Men: Legacy #246
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 New Mutants (Vol. 3) #23
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 X-Men: Legacy #247
- ↑ New Mutants (Vol. 3) #24
- ↑ X-Men: Legacy #248
- ↑ Red Skull (Vol. 2) #2
- ↑ X-Men: Legacy #300
- ↑ Age of X Assessment: Chapter 1
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 20.4 20.5 20.6 Age of X Communiqués #3
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 Age of X Communiqués #4
- ↑ Age of X: Historical Log #4–5
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 23.6 Age of X: Universe #1
- ↑ Age of X Communiqués #2