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The series ended after the episode "Graduation Day", which aired on September 20, 1997. The X-Men animated show was the longest-running Marvel Comics animated series, lasting for five years, with five seasons and a total of 76 episodes until their record was beaten by Ultimate Spider-Man, when its 77th episode aired on October 17, 2015. [2]
In its prime, X-Men garnered very high ratings for a Saturday morning cartoon and received praise for adapting many different storylines from the comics. Haim Saban credits the success of the series in assisting him to sell his next project to Fox: Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. [4] X-Men reached a viewership of over 23 million households. [22]
The following is an episode list for Marvel Anime, a four-part series of anime shows as part of a collaboration between Marvel Entertainment and Madhouse. The four series are based on Iron Man, Wolverine, X-Men and Blade. [1] These series had their debut in Japan on Animax, and aired in North America on G4 and in Australia on Sci Fi.
X-Men (エックスメン, Ekkusu Men) (DVD title: X-Men: Animated Series) is the third show of the series with 12 episodes. It aired on Animax from April 1, 2011, to June 24, 2011. It aired on Animax from April 1, 2011, to June 24, 2011.
X-Men '97 is an American animated television series created by Beau DeMayo for the streaming service Disney+, based on the Marvel Comics superhero team the X-Men.It is a revival of X-Men: The Animated Series (1992–1997) produced by Marvel Studios Animation, and continues the story of the X-Men from the earlier series.
Blob, Thunderbird, and Sunfire made a cameo during the Genosha part of the Motendo video game world, in the X-Men '97 episode "Motendo". Marrow, Pixie, Gentle, Glob Herman, Gargouille, Nature Girl, Multiple Man, Exodus, Cipher, Dazzler, Boom-Boom, Archangel, and Squid-Boy appear as residents of Genosha in the X-Men '97 episode "Remember It".
X-Men: Pryde of the X-Men is an animated television pilot originally broadcast in 1989 on the Marvel Action Universe television block, featuring Marvel Comics' mutant superheroes of the X-Men. [1] The pilot aired infrequently in syndication and was later released on video. It later served as the basis for Konami's X-Men arcade game. [2]
As part of a four-series collaboration between the Japanese Madhouse animation house and Marvel, the X-Men starred in a 12 episode anime series that premiered in Japan on Animax and in the United States on G4 in 2011. [6] [7] The series deals with the X-Men coming to Japan to investigate the disappearance of Armor.