Marvel Gold. La Imposible Patrulla-X #1
This volume collects the early adventures of the second generation of X-Men, following the original team's disappearance. It features the debut of characters like Wolverine, Storm, Colossus, and Nightcrawler as they are recruited by Professor X to rescue the original X-Men from the living island Krakoa, redefining the team for a new era.
"¡Segunda Génesis!" kicks off with a high-stakes clash as Iron Fist faces off against the Steel Serpent, only to be drained of his chi—then finds himself tangled in a chaotic showdown with a pint-sized X-Man at Misty's apartment. With Wolverine tracking Jean Grey and Storm accidentally drenched in party dip, the situation spirals into a full team brawl until Jean and Scott finally intervene. Written by Chris Claremont and illustrated by John Byrne and Dave Cockrum, with Dan Green on inks and Bruce Patterson handling colors, this 2011 Panini España release features a cover by Gil Kane and Dave Cockrum, with Terry Austin on inks.
In "¡El Día del Juicio Final!", Fuego Solar and the former members of the Patrulla X (excluding Ciclope) part ways with the team as Ciclope begins training a new generation of mutants. When the Bestia calls for help, the New Patrulla must race to rescue Valhalla Base from the clutches of the Count Nefaria.
In "¡Sendero de Guerra!", the Imposible Patrulla-X infiltrates Count Nefaria’s stronghold to stop his latest scheme, leading to a desperate final stand when Thunderbird attempts to halt Nefaria’s escape in a suicide maneuver that ends in a fiery explosion. The story captures the team’s high-stakes mission and the cost of their heroism, all within the tight confines of a single, intense mission.
In the eerie stillness of the forest, Cíclope’s uncontrolled power shatters a mysterious monolith—unearthing a dark force that soon attacks the X-Men. With Xavier uncovering the monolith’s ancient origins, Storm is sent to seal it, only to find herself besieged by demons from beyond. Written by a team behind the series, this chilling chapter blends supernatural dread with the X-Men’s signature resilience.
In "¡Mi Hermano, Mi Enemigo!", Xavier is haunted by recurring nightmares of a cosmic war between rival star fleets, where a lone ship barely escapes annihilation—its final glimpse of a crew member etched in his mind. When Polaris and Kaos are hijacked by the villainous Eric el Rojo and turned into weapons against Xavier, they assault the X-Men at a Rio Diablo airport, forcing a desperate retreat as reinforcements close in. The tension spikes when Wolverine confronts Cyclops over his hesitation to use his optic blasts, setting the stage for a clash that’s as personal as it is perilous.
In "Feliz Navidad, Patrulla-X...", the X-Men celebrate Christmas together before being split up and ambushed by new Mark III Sentinels. When Cyclops and Jean Grey are captured along with Banshee and Wolverine, their only hope lies in a desperate escape that leads them through a hidden portal—only to find themselves stranded in the vastness of space.
In "¡La Estrella de Muerte!", Banshee, Lobezno, and the Chica Maravillosa are rescued from the void of space by the Centinelas, who lead them to the Kennedy Space Center. With the help of the enigmatic Dr. Peter Corbeau, the team commandeers a shuttle and races toward a hidden base controlled by Dr. Steven Lang—only to be ambushed by the very forces they’re trying to escape. As Cíclope receives a cryptic telepathic warning from Jean, the group finds themselves scattered and under siege by the original team’s remnants.
In "Ningún Hombre-X Ha Amado Tanto...", the X-Men face off against the Sentinel-X, only for Wolverine to uncover their true nature as androids. With the storm-scorched sky blocking escape, Peter Corbeau admits he can't manually pilot the rescue ship, leaving Jean Grey to step forward—her telekinesis her only hope as radiation breaches the hull.
In the aftermath of an emergency landing in Jamaica Bay, the X-Men rescue a mysterious figure rising from the water—Jean Grey, but changed, distant, and unconscious. Taken to a hidden hospital and slowly recovering, the team is sent on a vacation to a castle inherited by Sean, only to be trapped by a deadly trap set by Tom the Black and the Juggernaut, who reveal their true intentions.
In "¿Quién detendrá al Juggernaut?", Storm confronts her deepest fears as claustrophobia triggers a haunting reawakening of her origin, while the rest of the X-Men struggle to stop Black Tom and the unstoppable Juggernaut. The story pits personal trauma against overwhelming force in a tense, character-driven showdown.
In "El Nombre del Caballero es Magneto," the X-Men arrive at Muir Island expecting routine checks—only to find Eric the Red has resurrected Magneto in full adulthood, stirring old tensions and leaving Maggie visibly unsettled. The story unfolds with quiet tension as past and present collide in a setting that’s never been more charged.
In "¡Fénix Desencadenada!", Eric's deception draws Firelord into a clash with the X-Men, forcing Jean Grey to awaken her Phoenix power once more to stand against the growing danger. With Lilandra arriving on Earth only to be captured by Eric, Professor Xavier sends the team through a space portal to rescue her—just as the full force of the threat begins to unfold.
In "¡Donde Ningún Hombre-X Ha Estado Nunca!", the X-Men race against time to rescue Lilandra from her treacherous cousin, who seeks to harness the M'Kraan Crystal’s power—only to be blocked by the Imperial Guard. When the Starjammers arrive unexpectedly, the team must navigate a high-stakes cosmic crisis with no clear path to victory.
In "Armageddon Now!", the X-Men and Starjammers race against time to reach the M'Kraan Crystal, facing off against the relentless Crystal Guardians in a high-stakes battle for survival. When Jean Grey awakens to the full might of the Phoenix, her power becomes the universe's last hope—while a shocking revelation about Cyclops' past adds weight to the crisis.
In "Irrumpe: La Patrulla-X," Danny Rand finds himself tangled in chaos when a surprise visit to Misty's apartment turns into a full-blown brawl with the young X-Men—no, not the usual kind of team-up. With Iron Fist reeling from a brutal loss to the Steel Serpent, and Wolverine prowling nearby, tensions explode when the team mistakes him for a threat, leading to a wild fight that only Jean Grey and Scott Summers can calm. When the dust settles, Danny’s unexpected connection to the building’s ownership adds a twist neither he nor the team saw coming.
In "¡Los Héroes están en Casa!" from *La Imposible Patrulla-X #1*, the X-Men settle into a rare moment of peace at the Mansion after saving the universe—only for the unexpected arrival of Weapon Alpha to disrupt their downtime. The sudden assault has a strange goal: to return Wolverine to Canada, leaving the team scrambling to understand why.
In "¡Juegos Mentales!", Beast tracks the missing X-Men to a dusty Texas carnival where they’re performing as freaks under an unseen mind control—only to uncover Mesmero behind the illusion. When the team breaks free, Magneto’s sudden arrival turns the already tense atmosphere into something far more dangerous.
In "¡Magneto Triunfante!," Magneto captures the X-Men and imprisons them beneath an active volcano, where he subjects them to a chilling display of control. With Maggie exacting revenge for his regression to childhood, the X-Foes are bound in special chairs that silence them and leave them dependent on a robotic nanny—trapped not just physically, but utterly powerless.
In "¡Enfrentamiento!", the X-Men break free from their prison chairs only to confront Magneto in a desperate showdown beneath the Antarctic ice. As the base collapses and lava floods the tunnels, Phoenix shields Beast from the inferno—leaving the rest of the team vanished in the molten depths.
In "Desolación," Beast and Jean return from Antarctica with devastating news: the X-Men are gone. As the surviving team journeys through the wilds of the Savage Land, they find uneasy peace among the Fall People—until Lykos, ever scheming, drains Storm’s power to reclaim his ancient form as Sauron.
In "¡Visiones de Muerte!", the X-Men face off against Sauron, only to see him revert to his true form—Karl Lykos—amidst the shifting dangers of the Savage Land. As Ka-Zar arrives with a tale of Zaladane awakening the ancient Garokk, Cyclops must choose between staying to confront the growing threat and leaving to protect Xavier, while the land itself begins to freeze, cutting off their escape.
In "¡Guerra Psíquica!", the X-Men, stranded at sea, are rescued by a Japanese vessel, where Professor Xavier shares a vivid memory of his first encounter with Storm—then a thief in Cairo—during a perilous clash with the Shadow King. The story unfolds as a flashback that weaves past and present, revealing the roots of a bond forged in danger.
In "¡El Hundimiento de Japón!," the X-Men land in Japan to confront a wave of Mandroids led by Moses Magnum, setting off a high-stakes clash that brings Wolverine face-to-face with Mariko. As the battle rages, a devastating turn forces Xavier to make a desperate choice, leaving behind everything he’s known.
In "Se Busca: ¡Lobezno! ¡Vivo o Muerto!", the X-Men find themselves in a sudden standoff after a storm forces their plane into Canadian airspace, where Alpha Flight awaits to apprehend Wolverine—alive or dead. With tensions flaring and the skies over Canada turning hostile, the team must fight to protect their own before the situation spirals further.
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↩ Reprints Giant-Size X-Men #1 (1975), The X-Men #94 (1975), The X-Men #95 (1975), The X-Men #96 (1975), The X-Men #97 (1976), The X-Men #98 (1976), The X-Men #99 (1976), The X-Men #100 (1976), The X-Men #101 (1976), The X-Men #102 (1976), The X-Men #103 (1977), The X-Men #104 (1977), The X-Men #105 (1977), The X-Men #106 (1977), Iron Fist #15 (1977), The X-Men #107 (1977), The X-Men #108 (1977), The X-Men #109 (1978), The X-Men #110 (1978), The X-Men #111 (1978), The X-Men #112 (1978), The X-Men #113 (1978), The X-Men #114 (1978), The X-Men #115 (1978), The X-Men #116 (1978), The X-Men #117 (1979), The X-Men #118 (1979), The X-Men #119 (1979), The X-Men #120 (1979), The X-Men #121 (1979), Marvel Treasury Edition #26 (1980)
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