The X-Men franchise has long been plagued by as many resurrections as there have been deaths. Before the Krakoa Era's conclusion, the living island introduced the concept of a resurrection pool for mutants to enjoy the fruits of upon their deaths. That get-out-of-death free card expired as soon as Krakoa was over, but the franchise certainly expended this resource to its fullest extent.

While resurrections obviously took place in the X-Men franchise under different circumstances before Krakoa came to , the Krakoa Era offered new opportunities for mutants to come back from the dead. Resurrection is a common element of superhero storytelling, particularly in the X-Men franchise. Whether they appear in grandiose events or at the hands of Z-list villains, some of Marvel's most shocking deaths have happened to the X-Men. As established through Krakoa, with death comes rebirth, and some X-Men revivals are simply historically significant.

10 Moira MacTaggert

House of X / Powers of X by Jonathan Hickman, Pepe Larraz, and R. B. Silva

It's hard to talk about Krakoa as an era without talking about how it began with Moira MacTaggert. For years, Moira was a friend, adviser, collaborator, and oftentimes a lover to Professor X. Her death signified the end of that partnership - or so it seemed. House of X / Powers of X revealed that not only was Moira alive again, but she was retconned into a mutant who always had the power to resurrect. As it turns out, Moira had lived several lives, with her tenth being the most significant.

Moira's powers allow her to die, reconvene in her mother's womb, and then carry on with life with full knowledge of the possible futures to come.

Moira's powers allow her to die, reconvene in her mother's womb, and then carry on with life with full knowledge of the possible futures to come. Her present knowledge formulated Earth-616. She used this knowledge to found Krakoa alongside Xavier and Magneto, making her essential to the creation of Krakoa's Resurrection Protocols for the X-Men.

9 Jean Grey

First Resurrection (of Many): The X-Men #101 by Chris Claremont, Dave Cockrum, Frank Chiaramonte, Bonnie Wilford, and John Costanza

Jean Grey has died so many times in Marvel lore, it's almost become a running gag at this point that the X-Men have shrugged off in more recent scenarios. Her first death, though, remains the most significant not only to the X-Men, but the Marvel franchise. Jean's reintroduction as the Phoenix changed the course of the character's history and biology forever, with her suring any previous expectations she had for herself as a master telepath. In the same breath, the introduction of the Phoenix expanded Marvel's cosmic lore.

Concepts like crossover event.

8 The Entire X-Men Team

House of X #1 by Jonathan Hickman, Pepe Larraz, Marte Gracia, and Clayton Cowles

House of X #1 is where the Krakoa era began, including the X-Men's understanding of their resurrection pools on Krakoan soil - and how the readers understood them. The visual of Charles Xavier tending to his revived pupils, hovering over them as they crawl reborn at his feet as he echoed the iconic "to me, my X-Men" call makes for a surprisingly haunting visual by X-Men standards. As much as it served a purpose in establishing a new status quo, it also served to plainly state to the reader how horrifying of a process this is.

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Some will argue that Krakoa was always doomed to fail, and seeing an image in the era's first pages that looks as if it was pulled straight out of a horror movie makes for a prime example of something always being... off about Krakoa. Something was always rotten in the state of Krakoa, and it only took five years for the rest of the Marvel Universe to recognize it.

7 Colossus

Astonishing X-Men #4 by Joss Whedon, John Cassaday, Laura Martin, and Chris Eliopoulos

During a time when mutantkind was plagued by the Legacy Virus, Beast was able to find a cure using notes from the then-murdered Moira MacTaggert. Knowing that the cure could only be released airborne upon the death of the first , Colossus injects himself in Uncanny X-Men #390 by Scott Lobdell and Salvador Larroca. For a time, this was recognized as one of the X-Men's most noble sacrifices.

Colossus died with honor, and X-Men fans were ready to accept that he was gone. That being said, those same fans were even more delighted to see Colossus return. Astonishing X-Men #4 establishes how the alien Ord stole Colossus' body following his death, reviving him to experiment on until he's eventually rescued by the team. Colossus manages to have one of the best deaths and resurrections in X-Men history.

6 Charlies Xavier (Professor X)

Avengers vs. X-Men #11 by Brian Michael Bendis, Olivier Coipel, Mark Morales, Laura Martin, and Chris Eliopoulos

Since the days of the original five X-Men students, Cyclops had always looked up to Professor X, and Charles Xavier saw Scott Summers as his star pupil. Overtime, their dynamic would shift the more that Scott witnessed his mentor commit acts that were more akin to a villain. He outwardly started to question Xavier, and that doubt soon turned to hatred for the X-Men's coach. Things reached their zenith once Cyclops became host to the Phoenix, using his newfound power to kill Professor X.

Xavier eventually returns, forcing Cyclops and himself to try to mend their fraught relationship.

In due time, as everyone does in X-Men lore, Xavier eventually returns, forcing Cyclops and himself to try to mend their fraught relationship. As hard as they worked to resolve their disputes, the damage was done beyond repair. Today, they can't even co-exist on the X-Men anymore. Cyclops wants nothing to do with Xavier, and no matter how hard Xavier tries, they cannot fix their relationship.

5 Nightcrawler

Amazing X-Men #5 by Jason Aaron, Ed McGuinness, Dexter Vines, Marte Gracia, Joe Caramagna

"The Battle of the Atom" is one of the most definitive Nightcrawler stories in X-Men lore. His death makes for one of the most heartbreaking moments to take place within the franchise, but his resurrection makes for one of the most ambitious in all of Marvel. The Catholic mutant finds himself in Heaven, wishing he could return to his friends and missing a sense of adventure. He gets more than he bargained for when his then-father, Azazel (before Mystique is retconned as his father), uses his connection to his son to infiltrate Heaven.

With the help of mystical imps called Bamfs, Nightcrawler has the X-Men summoned to Heaven for help. He then uses the Bamfs to cast Azazel out of Heaven, but can't do so without casting himself out as well. In doing so, he returns to the X-Men, having sacrificed his opportunity for eternal peace.

4 Lilandra

X-Force #9 by Geoffrey Thorne, Marcus To, Erick Arciniega, and Joe Caramagna

Lilandra's return is actually the latest resurrection to happen in X-Men history, and simultaneously, one of the most surprising. Lilandra Neramani was introduced into X-Men lore in 1975 as the alien wife of Charles Xavier, both parents to Xandra. As such, she was anointed as the Empress of the alien Shi'ar Interstellar Empire. Lilandra was killed off during the 2009 War of Kings miniseries, but 16 years later in 2025, the beyond-powerful hero is back.

Lilandra first appeared in 1975's The X-Men #97 by Chris Claremont, Dave Cockrum, Sam Grainger, Don Warfield, and Annette Kawecki.

Seeing her return could not have come at a better time. Xavier's relationship with Cyclops (and, really, the entire X-Men) is damaged beyond repair. Reuniting with his alien wife and retiring from Earth gives Xavier a new trajectory when he's not able to redeem himself in the eyes of the X-Men.

3 Thunderbird Returns After Decades

X-Men: The Trial of Magneto #5 by Leah Williams, Lucas Werneck, Edgar Delgado, and Clayton Cowles

Thunderbird has the misfortune of being the first member of the X-Men to die in battle. While a historical accolade on paper, this death stood for nearly fifty years. It's rare to see any comic book character stay dead for that long, especially as an X-Man, but again, Krakoa's resurrection pools changed the game for every member of the mutant race, John Proudstar included.

As much as his death has been celebrated and his death was his own fault. That's one of the best parts about resurrection that often goes overlooked: the opportunities to tell new stories and character growth through the revived character's reflection. Thunderbird managed to reflect and grow as a character by taking ability for his own death.

2 Cable

"Kid Cable" Debuts in Extermination #1 by Ed Brisson, Pepe Larraz, Marte Gracia, and Joe Sabino

As if Cable's death wasn't shocking enough, it is soon revealed that the culprit was none other than Cable himself - specifically a younger version. The younger version of Nathan Summers, soon to be known as Kid Cable, was a time-traveler tasked with the mission of not only bringing the original five X-Men back to their timeline after being transported to the present, but to replace the adult Cable in duty.

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1 Beast

Beast's Clone Debuts in X-Force #48 by Benjamin Percy, Robert Gill, Guru-eFX, and Joe Caramagna

Most fans Beast as one of the original five X-Men and a gentle soul, but he hasn't been either for a very long time. In more recent years, Beast has become a stone-cold antagonist for the X-Men, rebranding himself as Beast Prime and unleashing clones of himself to commit despicable acts in his name. Like Professor X before him, Beast's crimes became too reprehensible to justify redemption or rekindling a positive relationship with the X-Men.

And so Hank McCoy was outright replaced by one of his clones, who is missing forty years of memories from the original Beast's life. As such, this new Beast is, essentially, a past version of Beast that existed long before he ever became evil. It's the only way that the X-Men could've realistically gotten the old Beast back, and with Beast Prime presumed dead, this new Beast is here to stay.