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Textless cover of X-Men: Return of Magik #1 (November 2008). Art by Olivier Coipel and Mark Morales. Illyana Rasputin is the sorceress supreme of her Limbo dimension. [100] In Limbo, she is able to cast any magic spell that Belasco could, having had access to his store of sorcerous knowledge.
Magik was a four-issue comic book limited series published by Marvel Comics in 1983–1984, starring the fictional characters Magik and Storm.The series title is consistently displayed on the covers as Storm and Illyana: Magik, but the official title as listed in the indicia is the reverse: Magik: Illyana and Storm.
Amanda Sefton debuted in the ninety-eighth issue of the 1976 X-Men series, created by Chris Claremont and Dave Cockrum. [2] She later appeared in the 1981 Uncanny X-Men series. She appeared in the 1998 Excalibur series. She appeared in the 2000 X-Men: Magik series, her first solo comic book series, by Dan Abnett, Andy Lanning, and Liam Sharp.
The X-Men are a team of mutant superheroes, published in American comic books by Marvel Comics.Over the decades, the X-Men have featured a rotating line up composed of many characters.
The X-Men all try unsuccessfully to thwart the invasion and Magik and Storm combine powers with the mystics to open a portal straight to X-Haven. Nightcrawler makes a deal to free Apocalypse from X-Haven if he reverts Colossus to his original state.
During their mission Magik, having teleported off into the future after the events of "X-Infernus", reappears at the X-Men's base in San Francisco. Magik informs Cannonball and Sunspot that Karma and Dani are going to die soon, prompting Cannonball to assemble a team consisting of himself, Sunspot, Magma and Magik to rescue the pair.
In X-Force #87-90 (1997), Magma appeared as an antagonist to her former teammates, but her villainous personality was short-lived as she returned to her affiliation with the X-Men in semi-regular publication in New Mutants Vol. 2 #3-4, #7-8, #11 and #13 (2003-2004) and as a team member in X-Treme X-Men #34-46 (2004).
Marvel then dropped X-Men: From the Ashes Infinity Comic, written by Alex Paknadel with art by Diogenes Neve, on June 5; the series picks up from X-Men (vol. 6) #35 and leads into X-Men (vol. 7) #1. [13] [14] Starting with X-Men (vol. 7) #1 (July 2024), each From the Ashes issue included a QR code which led to an extra digital stinger page.