X-Men #28
| Writer | Jed MacKay |
| Artist | Netho Diaz |
| Cover Price | $4.99 |
DANGER ROOM: PART THREE! As the X-Men struggle against the mysterious machinations of the Danger Room, help comes from an unexpected direction! But with the forces arrayed against them, can the X-Men hope to prevail?
CRITIC REVIEWS Back to Top
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9.4
Fanlight Zone - Richard Coryell
Apr 01, 2026X-Men #28 continues to ramp up the story in this arc. The peril the X-Men find themselves in builds up the anticipation of the reader as the story plays out. The uncertainty of the future of the team, mixed with the hope we get at the end of the book, takes that anticipation to a fever pitch. This main line story for the X-Men has been consistently good and is delivering with every issue. If you haven’t been reading this series, you should reconsider and pick up a copy at the shop this week. Read Full Review
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8.7
The Super Powered Fancast - Deron Generally
Apr 01, 2026Diaz creates beautifully detailed and visually exciting art throughout the issue. I love the visual style of the story and the intensity of the characters emotions. Read Full Review
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7.7
KPB Comics - A.S Tiger
Apr 02, 2026X-Men #28 features improved art that upgrades and enhances the visual look of Diaz’s pencils and handles the segregated stories efficiently. However, the villains remain forgettable and uninspired, and the pacing of this issue and the previous one belies a problem that’s been inherent in Jed MacKay’s writing from the start. Read Full Review
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5.5
Weird Science Marvel Comics - mrgabehernandez
Apr 01, 2026X-Men #28 welcomes you back to another week of watching highly capable characters forget their own skill sets just to make the plot function. While you can certainly appreciate the moody, claustrophobic atmosphere and the kinetic, muscular panel compositions that keep the visual momentum moving briskly forward, the structural foundation holding it all together is deeply compromised. The script relies far too heavily on glaring logical conveniences, from brilliant masterminds accepting unverified kills to seasoned telepaths inexplicably refusing to use their most basic scanning abilities to solve a simple mystery. Ultimately, despite the strong aesthetic effort, this issue does not earn a place in your limited budget when there are far more logically consistent, tightly written superhero narratives available right now. Read Full Review
USER REVIEWS Back to Top
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4.5
Last issue we were really on to something here. the idea of the X-men being taken out by a special team who researched them seemed passable. but this issue is full of logic holes just for the sake of moving the story from A to B. Magneto being disrespected was too much. hes just a sad sack in a chair who hovers around in the background of most issues. the inclusion of just retarded level villains. too much. we barely get X-men in the X-men book and thats the norm. This title slipped back into Jeds bad habit of focusing on villains that he cannot write well.
Someone. Please help the X-men titles. Also Netho Diaz art is competent but mailed in on this issue. He has so little to work with.+ Like • Comment -
4.0
It seems that last issue was an exception. We’re back to sloppy writing and average art. Also, I don’t care about any of these X-Men, so I might as well stop reading this shit.
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10
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10