Total Nerd Ranks: X-Men Animated Series Vs. Fox Movie Universe
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Apr 15, 2025
Which do YOU think is best?
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The familiar debate, which is better, X-Men the Animated Series or X-Men the Fox Movie Universe
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In today's episode, we'll let the facts do the talking and come out with a clear winner
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It's going to be a bloodbath. This is Versus, a head-to-head competition in order to answer the age-old question
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who's the best? Let's rumble. In case you're unfamiliar, the X-Men were created in the 60s by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby
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but didn't really find their stride until Chris Claremont and an army of artists like Dave Cockrum
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John Byron and Jim Lee propelled them into a global phenomenon. Eventually, they landed their own animated TV series and feature film franchise
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which is exactly what we're going to be debating today. Which is better
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Category 1, Money. This one isn't even close. The show lasted five years and 76 episodes
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The movies lasted almost 20 and 13 feature films. Any guess what the ballpark number of the Fox movies took home in terms of money
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One billion? Two billion? Four billion? You'd be off. It's generated $6.067 billion in box office results for Fox
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So, you know, not even remotely close to the admittedly very impressive results of XTAS
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Because it made millions of dollars in toy and ad revenue. But that's just simply nowhere near close to $6 billion
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6 out of 10 XTAS. 10 out of 10 Fox movies. Winner, Fox movies
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Category 2. Number of successful direct comic story adaptations. First airing in 1992 and running until 1997
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X-Men the animated series lasted for 76 episodes and sparked a massive cultural interest in
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the merry mutants during the 1990s. The same could be said of Fox's live action franchise, which ran for close to 20 years
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produced 13 films, and raked in literal billions of dollars. However the question isn fiscal success It a question of literal and direct adaptations from X stories to the screen The Fox movies only really did two and a half adaptations of actual stories from the comics
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Dark Phoenix, Days of Future Past, and God Loves Man Kills. And very loose adaptations of the Wolverine miniseries for The Wolverine
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and Old Man Logan for Logan. Which honestly, none of them really work as adaptations
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Most of them make semi-okay to pretty good movies. But as adaptations, they're not very strong
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But in terms of actual adaptations, I'm sorry, seeing Silver Samurai done that dirty still hurts
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The animated series had direct adaptations of the Apocalypse storyline. The Final Decision, Sanctuary, Weapon X, The Phalanx Covenant, Days of Future Past, and Dark Phoenix Saga
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You just can't compete, Fox. You just can't. 7 of 10 XTAS, 4 out of 10 Fox
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Winner, XTAS, Category 3, Gateway Drug. Everyone finds their path into a massive, sprawling fanbase like the X-Men in their own way
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It's so large and maze-like it can be hard to find your place or just get your bearings
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So, which of these two juggernauts conscripted more people to be fans of the franchise as a whole
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Let's examine. The movies definitely exposed X-Men to more people. However, the animated show basically convinced an entire generation that the X-Men were cool
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The animated show also worked in tandem with the speculator bubble to balloon the X-Men comic sales to still-yet-untouched heights
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Jim Lee's Adjective List No. 1 sold 8.18 million copies, and Rob Lieflitz's X-Force No. 1 sold 5 million copies
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Frankly, it depends on how you catalog it. The movies made the X-Men a globally recognized brand
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but that didn't flow back into the comics or the toys or the video games like XTAS did
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XTAS was a conveyor belt right into the middle of fandom. An entire generation fell deeply in love with the X because of the animated show existence so honestly it a tie 8 out of 10 XTAS 8 out of 10 Fox Winner tie
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Category 4, toys. Let's call a Senator Kelly a Senator Kelly. A lot of the toys for movies and shows from the 90s and 2000s sucked
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But with X-Men the movie, you're pretty much getting the bottom of the barrel. The XTAS, that s*** ruled
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Yeah, their anatomy is a little chunky. And yeah, their faces are a little weird sometimes
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But overall, they're way better quality-wise. Plus, the animated show had toy lines that included deep-cut characters like Fitzroy
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Forearm, and Maverick. You didn't get no Maverick in the movie toys. You just got weird, puffy Wolverine
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4 of 10 movies, 6 of 10 XTAS. Winner, XTAS. Category 5, Wolverine overdosing
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Wolverines, Wolverines, Wolverines everywhere, but not a drop of Cyclops. We all know that Slim got the short end of the stick in the movies
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But they also just quadrupled down on the Wolverine in the movies. And honestly, in the show, too
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He was everywhere. Like, Wolverine was everywhere in the 90s and 2000s
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Some of it was great. Laniel Francis Yu, Jim Lee, Marvel vs. Capcom, all great Wolverines
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Wolverine from X-Men Origins Wolverine? Not so much. Basically, he was just omnipresent in both versions of the X-Men
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But which version of him was the most overdone? While considering Days of Future Past was rewritten completely so that Wolverine could be sent back in time
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I think you know the answer, bub. 7 out of 10 XTAS. 10 out of 10 Fox Movies
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Winner. Fox Movies. Category 6. Theme song. The theme song for XTAS was created by Aime Saban and Shuki Levy
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And it's undoubtedly the most iconic and well-remembered aspect of the show. Coupled with intro cards of all the primary X it set the tone and vibe for the show As far as the score for the live movie goes yeah it good Written by Michael Kamen of Iron Giant Frequency and Band of Brothers fame it has a classic timeless feel to it
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However, it's not anywhere in the league of the perfect metonymy that the XTAS theme song is
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XTS all the way. 9 out of 10 XTAS. 7 out of 10 Fox movies
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Winner, XTAS. Category 7. Least cringy tie-in comics. Let's just put it this way
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The X-Men movie adaptation comic is one of the most hated comics ever, and if that wasn't bad enough
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Then you had the X-Men the movie comic that came with the X-Men the movie trading card game
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which showcased a bunch of D-list X-Men villains in the movie-accurate would-be black leather
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At least the cover to this issue was done by Art Adams. It's the small things in life, isn't it
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Across the aisle, we have the X-Men Adventures comics, which were the X-Men comics made to tie into the success of the show
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But they didn't actually look like the show. They just looked like cheap knockoffs of the actual X-Men comics
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They're not horrible, just kind of bland and tasteless. They're like the graham crackers of X-Men comics
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which is distinctly better than weirdo comic within a TCG starter set within a marketing push gimmick Fox was rocking with
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3 of 10 XTAS. 1 out of 10 Fox movie. Winner, XTAS
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So there you have it. We've covered the age-old debate from the usual perspectives
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like money, weirdness of Senator Kelly toys, and tie-in merch, and then some of the more off-the-beaten-path points of view
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like Wolverine overdosing and quotients of Mavericks per Senator Kelly's. It's very delicate math
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Speaking of math, if you've been paying attention, you'll be aware that we have come to a final, concrete
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and definitely not subjective decision regarding the topic of the day. Who wins in a head-to-head matchup
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X-Men The Animated Series or X-Men The Fox Movies? And the answer is X-Men The Animated Series
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