Fall of the House of X #3
| Writer | Gerry Duggan |
| Artist | Lucas Werneck, Jethro Morales |
| Cover Price | $4.99 |
THE END HAS TRULY BEGUN! The X-Men have taken all they're willing to take from Orchis... Now it's time for them to do the dishing out. Unfortunately, just when it seems like one threat is over...another rises to take its place. The final battle of the Krakoan age rages as two series that are one move toward a crash that will echo across the universe...
Rated T+
CRITIC REVIEWS
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9.2
Comic Watch - Bethany W Pope
Mar 18, 2024This was perhaps the weakest issue of the event, thus far, but there were still a few effective moments glittering amidst the rubble. Read Full Review
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9.0
The Super Powered Fancast - Deron Generally
Mar 13, 2024Werneck and Morales deliver fantastic art throughout the issue. Both visual styles complement each other perfectly. Read Full Review
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9.0
Nerd Initiative - Ken M.
Mar 13, 2024The X-Men do not hear a final bell as their last stand vs. Orchis continues! Duggan balances the dramatic atmosphere with big moments. The art team of Werneck, Morales, Valenza and Lanham give readers much to enjoy with strong visuals leaving a lasting imprint heading into the next phase. Read Full Review
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8.5
Comic Book Revolution - Kevin Lainez
Mar 13, 2024Fall of the House of X #3 is easily the best issue of this X-Men crossover thus far. The story had a much more focused presentation. This helped make the war between the X-Men and Orchis have its maximum impact. The spot this issue leaves us increased the curiosity of how things will turn out when all is said and done. Read Full Review
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6.7
Major Spoilers - Christopher Rondeau
Mar 13, 2024Fall of the House of X #3 finally leads to the conclusion of Orchis versus Krakoa, and while that feels good, it has some questionable narrative decisions. Read Full Review
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4.0
ComicBook.com - Jamie Lovett
Mar 13, 2024At three issues in, Fall of the House of X has become the antithesis of the House of X miniseries from which it takes its name. Where Jonathan Hickman insisted that all other X-Men titles end before he began his run to ensure that House of X (and Powers of X) were the sole, singular X-Men narrative for readers to focus on, Fall of the House of X feels less like a story in itself and more like a highlight reel of events happening in the handful of other Fall of X stories that are running simultaneously. Read Full Review