The Age of Apocalypse was a comic book storyline. It was a major event in the Marvel Universe, mostly affecting mutant titles like the X-Men. Although occurring in the alternate universe of Earth-295, it has often had ramifications in the universe of Earth-616, the universe most commonly used in Marvel Comics.
Legion (David Haller), an extremely powerful psionic mutant and son of Professor Charles Xavier and Israeli diplomat Gabrielle Haller, travels back in time with the intention of killing the former best friend, now Arch-Nemesis of Xavier and his X-Men, Magneto.
On the verge of ending Magneto's life, Xavier interspaces himself between the two, and Legion kills Xavier instead. Due to a "Grandfather Paradox", Legion then ceases to exist. His father, of course, has now died before he was even fathered.
Because of Xavier's sacrifice, Magneto comes to believe in his late and former friend's dream of peaceful co-existence between humans and mutants. Apocalypse, a nearly immortal mutant who has survived for centuries was monitoring the fight. In this reality, he chooses this moment as the perfect time to begin his "survival of the fittest" genetic war. In the regular Marvel timeline, this doesn't happen until 10 years later.
In this timeline Magneto establishes the X-Men but not until after Apocalypse establishes himself as a major power. Apocalypse comes to rule all of North America; New York City is renamed Apocalypse Island and the Statue of Liberty is replaced by a gigantic statue of his visage.
Apocalypse initiates a worldwide genocidal campaign of "cullings" in which millions of humans die. The few that survive live on parts of Europe and Africa which aren't devastated by nuclear weapons; a fleet of Sentinels remaining as their only defense.
Meanwhile, the disturbance of the timeline leads to a crystallization wave of the M'Kraan Crystal that is heading toward Earth...
| Team | Leader | Members | Notes |
| X-Men | Magneto | Led out of the ruined Xavier mansion, which never became a school in this universe. | |
| X-Ternals (X-Force) | Gambit | Lila Cheney, Jubilee, Strong Guy, Sunspot | |
| X-Calibre (Excalibur) | Nightcrawler | Mystique, Switchback and Damask (the Black Queen of London's Hellfire Club). | |
| Generation Next (Generation X) | Shadowcat and Colossus | Husk, Chamber, Skin, Know-It-All (M), Mondo, Vincente | |
| The Outcasts | Forge | X-Man, Toad, Soaron (Sauron in normal continuity), Brute (Sunder in normal continuity), Mastermind, Sonique (Siryn in normal continuity) | X-Man is the son of Scott Summers & Jean Grey, forged from the DNA of Scott and Jean Summers by Mr. Sinister |
The only major mutant character missing in the original Age of Apocalypse is Psylocke. Fans speculate that she was likely either killed in one of Apocalypse's cullings or that she is one of the members of the Brain Trust keeping control over the pens. When the Age of Apocalypse was revisited a decade later, she appeared in X-Men: Age of Apocalypse #4 (May 2005). Her origin remains unknown. There has been no explanation of what exactly she was doing during the original Age of Apocalypse.
| Team | Members | Notes |
| Human High Council | Emma Frost, Bolivar Trask, Moira MacTaggert-Trask, Brian Braddock (Captain Britain), Mariko Yashida, "Thunderbolt" Ross | |
| Human High Council Agents | Gateway, Carol Danvers, Ben Grimm (Thing), Susan Storm (Invisible Woman), Tony Stark (Iron Man), Donald Blake (Thor), Clint Barton (Hawkeye), Peter Parker (Spider-Man), Gwen Stacy and Victor von Doom (Doctor Doom) | |
| Sentinels |
| Team | Members | Notes |
| Four Horsemen of Apocalypse | ||
| Elite Mutant Force | Cyclops, Havok, Beast (known later as "Dark Beast"), Northstar, Aurora, the Bedlam brothers Jesse Aaronson and his brother Christopher (known as King Bedlam of the second incarnation of the Hellions in normal continuity), Cannonball, Amazon, Emplate and the Monets | |
| The Madri | Duplicates of Jamie Madrox, the Multiple Man of Earth-616 | |
| The Brotherhood of Chaos (Brotherhood of Evil Mutants) | Arclight, Box (Madison Jeffries), Copycat, Spyne, Yeti | |
| Domino's Bounty Hunters | Domino, Grizzly and Caliban | |
| The Pale Riders | Danielle Moonstar, Damask (AOA version of the Black Queen of London's Hellfire Club), Dead Man Wade (Deadpool) | |
| Death's Inhuman Strike Force | Black Bolt, Medusa, Karnak, Gorgon, Triton, Crystal, Lockjaw, Rhino. | Genetically altered clones of the murdered Inhuman Royal Family. |
| Shadow King | ||
| Sebastian Shaw | ||
| Magma | ||
| The Infinites | Mudir Rictor, Prelate Unus, Prelate Delgado, and the Vanisher | Genetically engineered army created by Sinister and the Beast. |
| Wolverine (not the same as Wolverine in normal continuity). | ||
| Enslavers of Seattle Core | Sugar Man, Quietus | |
| Reavers | Donald Pierce, Slocum, Mangle, Dead-Eye and Vultura. | Humans enhanced by Apocalypse's techno-organic virus. |
| Diablo, the Absorbing Man | Two wardens in Apocalypse's prisoner camps in Mexico. | |
| Rex | Apocalypse's majordomo. | |
| Stryfe Force | Mikhail's Rasputin personal army. Formed by the best from his Upscale Program. | |
| Keeper Murdock (Daredevil) | Mikhail's personal warden. Responsible for watching over Empath, Mikhail's prisoner. | |
| Marauders | Dirigible (Kingpin/Wilson Fisk), Red (Norman Osborn), Arcade and the Owl | Human terrorists that have betrayed mankind |
| Bruce Banner/The Thing (The Incredible Hulk) | A scientist of the Human High Council, secretly "bought" by Mikhail Rasputin, who supplies him with mutants for experiments in which Banner seeks to mutate himself |
| Team | Members | Notes |
| Avalon (the Savage Land) | Destiny, Cain (Juggernaut) and Douglas Ramsey (Cypher) | |
| Heaven | Angel, Karma and Scarlett MacKenzie | Nightclub run by Angel and its employees. |
| John Proudstar (Thunderbird) | Leader of Ghost Dance, an anti-Apocalypse cult and the first stage in the Infernal Gallop to Avalon. | |
| Newell (Stingray) | Captain of the Submarine Excalibur that transports refugees to Avalon. | |
| Callisto | Leader of a band of pirates | |
| Prisoners in Sinister's Breeding Pens | Polaris, Avalanche, Artemis, Pyro, Phantazia, Newt, Blob | |
| Rossovich (Omega Red) | An information broker |
Some characters escape the Age of Apocalypse into the Earth 616 continuity. These include Nate Grey (the AOA version of Cable), Holocaust (one of Apocalypse's horsemen), Beast, and Sugar Man. Nate Grey allies himself with the X-Men a few times, but later "dies" by disseminating into every lifeform in the universe. Holocaust remains at large in the main Marvel Universe until he joins the Exiles and is killed by another universe's evil version of Hyperion (in Exiles #62). Sugar Man later died at the hands of the 616 Callisto. Dark Beast is the only one of these four still alive. Beast and Sugar Man are sent 20 years into Earth 616's past. This allows for major retconning that explains that the Age of Apocalypse's Beast (now known as Dark Beast) has a hand in the creation of the Morlocks. It also explains why Mister Sinister initiated the Mutant Massacre: he recognised his stolen handiwork, and ordered it exterminated, as a debasement of his art. Furthermore, Sugar Man gave genetic technology secrets to the Genegineer of Genosha, allowing this small nation to become powerful by enslaving mutants.
Blink escapes into the multiverse itself: she joins and leads the reality-hopping team of heroes known as the Exiles. Her counterpart on Earth 616 has been dead since the Phalanx Covenant story arc.
Sabretooth also survives along the same means as Blink. He joins a team of reality-hopping super beings known as Weapon X. During one mission, he opts to stay behind on a world to raise a child. Eventually, he is brought back into action and joins the Exiles. They have since visited the post story-arc Age of Apocalypse, the survival of which comes as a surprise to Blink and Sabretooth.
In 2005, Marvel published an Age of Apocalypse one-shot and mini-series to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the popular event.
The one-shot features stories set before the events depicted in the original "Age of Apocalypse" event, similar in focus to the Chronicles of the Age of Apocalypse issues: the one-shot contains the story of how Colossus and Shadowcat left the X-Men to train Generation Next, how Sabretooth met Wild Child, the first appearance of the Silver Samurai, and that the world survived the Human High Council's nuclear attack.
In the mini-series, we are introduced to several characters who weren't in the original storyline. Long time characters Psylocke, Cloak, Dagger, Wolfsbane and the Morlocks including Feral, Thornn, Leech, Marrow, Skids who where survivors of Mister Sinisters experiments are introduced. Newer characters X-23, Beak and Icarus are seen, along with the concept of Xorn.
The Exiles team, many of which are from the Age of Apocalypse universe, visited the world as well during this time.
Rise of Apocalypse, released the same year, was heavily influenced by the AoA storyline, including several characters and concepts from the storyline.
The Earth of "Age of Apocalypse" is now designated as Earth 295 as referenced in Official Handbook to the Marvel Universe: Alternate Universes 2005.
Alot of fans, outraged by Akira Yoshida's treatment of the epic storyline have chosen to ignore that the mini-series ever existed, and as such still consider X-Men: Omega to be the end of the Universe.
X-Men storylines | Marvel Comics dimensions | Marvel Legends
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"Age of Apocalypse".
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