New X-Men team Legionaires was created by Nightcrawler and it's "coming soon"

Legionaires
Legionaires (Image credit: Bob Quinn/Java Tartaglia/Clayton Cowles (Marvel Comics))

September 22's X-Men: The Onslaught Revelation #1 is in many ways the ending of the short-lived Way of X ongoing series, but it also sets up the beginning of something else called the Legionaires.

(No, that's not a misspelling - that's how Marvel is spelling their newest X-Men team. Not in the traditional spelling of 'Legionnaires' with two 'n's, and not connected to DC's Legion of Super-Heroes, who sometimes call their members Legionnaires.)

Marvel's Legionaires are introduced in the final pages of X-Men: The Onslaught Revelation, as the name of an informal group of heroes organized during the battle with Onslaught. 

X-Men: The Onslaught Revelation #1 excerpt (Image credit: Bob Quinn/Java Tartaglia/Clayton Cowles (Marvel Comics))

"Mutant cops - with my brain as the precinct," says the team's namesake, Legion.

The name is chosen by Nightcrawler, after rejecting Legion's suggestions of Peacekeepers, Shepherds, and Mutant Jedi - but describes the Legionaires as being different from the police.

"It's not police," says Nightcrawler. "We must defend what unites us, not punish the growing pains."

According to a "coming soon" advertisement after the story ends, the Legionaires line-up is comprised of Nightcrawler, Pixie, Juggernaut, ForgetMeNot, Doctor Nemesis, and Blindfold.

"We keep the peace. We keep the law. We keep the Spark," reads Marvel's ad for the new team.

As defined by Nightcrawler, the Spark is a philosophical-but-not-religious path of living birthed out of the formation of the mutant nation of Krakoa.

(Image credit: Marvel Comics)

The team will be based inside Legion's proverbial head - and that's not a metaphor. As a multi-powered mutant, Legion has at times organized his mind to be a functioning pocket universe. Using Krakoan technology and a little bit of inspiration, Legion has set it up as a permanent locale that will be accessible to mutants via a Krakoan portal he has seeded within his own psyche. He's nicknamed the place 'The House of L.'

Marvel hasn't made it clear how or where the Legionaires will be "coming soon", but it's possible they'll get their own Legionaires title. They could also theoretically appear in a second volume of Way of X, should that come to pass, or as part of another, totally different book.

Back when the surprise ending of Way of X and the X-Men: The Onslaught Revelation one-shot was announced, writer Simon Spurrier told ComicBook.com that his story would continue - but wouldn't elaborate on the shape of what comes next.

"There are some really big X-centric things coming down the pipe, which significantly muddy the waters of what you might think of as endings and beginnings," Spurrier said. "We're having a lot of fun rethinking the ways that shared-universe stories can be told. In practice, what that means is that when Way of X ends, it's absolutely not the end of the story. In TV terms, Way of X is season 1, and The Onslaught Revelation is the big season finale.

"Season 2? Well. Season 2 is something else altogether…" Spurrier hinted.

The Legionaires are the latest in a long line of X-Men teams across Marvel history. 

Chris Arrant

Chris Arrant covered comic book news for Newsarama from 2003 to 2022 (and as editor/senior editor from 2015 to 2022) and has also written for USA Today, Life, Entertainment Weekly, Publisher's Weekly, Marvel Entertainment, TOKYOPOP, AdHouse Books, Cartoon Brew, Bleeding Cool, Comic Shop News, and CBR. He is the author of the book Modern: Masters Cliff Chiang, co-authored Art of Spider-Man Classic, and contributed to Dark Horse/Bedside Press' anthology Pros and (Comic) Cons. He has acted as a judge for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards, the Harvey Awards, and the Stan Lee Awards. Chris is a member of the American Library Association's Graphic Novel & Comics Round Table. (He/him)