5/24/2023 0 Comments Inferno by jonathan hickman![]() ![]() Karima should also be noted as more than a parenthetical, especially when she does act as a really interesting mirror of Moira, both women being survivors of a dead reality, trying to save their species from certain doom. We could also probably point to Moira’s own lack of imagination in finding a different solution as a kind of meta-criticism of comics in general or the X-Men specifically. It’s explained that it was to save mutants from losing (though, through Omega Sentinel, the book itself establishes a future where mutants win, soooooo), but it’s probably also reasonable to say that Destiny and Mystique traumatized her into making various decisions other than “don’t resurrect Destiny” and “try to save mutants.” Moira built a nation to separate mutants from everyone else to eventually cure them of being mutants. The most egregious choice in Inferno, though, the one that I just don’t understand, maybe the biggest flop Hickman has ever written, is the conclusion to Moira X’s story. ![]() Establishing new traditions in your finale that didn’t even have time to work, gg ![]()
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