Table of Contents

M-Day

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The cataclysm known as M-Day occurred in the final pages of House of M #7, published in November 2005. The event was the climax of the House of M limited series, a major Marvel crossover event written by Brian Michael Bendis with art by Olivier Coipel. While the act itself is a single moment, it was the culmination of years of storytelling, most notably the preceding event, Avengers Disassembled (2004), also penned by Bendis. From a real-world, editorial perspective, M-Day served a critical function. By the early 2000s, the number of mutants in the Marvel Universe had become vast and unmanageable. The concept of mutants being a “feared and hated” minority was strained when their population numbered in the millions, with new mutants appearing constantly. Then-Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada and the Marvel creative summit sought a way to reset the status quo, making mutants a truly endangered species again and raising the stakes for the X-Men. The decision was to use the immense, poorly-defined powers of the scarlet_witch as the in-universe catalyst for this editorial mandate. The phrase “No more mutants” became one of the most iconic and universe-altering lines in modern comic book history, setting the stage for nearly a decade of X-Men stories centered on survival and eventual rebirth.

In-Universe Origin Story

The seeds of M-Day were sown in deep personal trauma and the catastrophic misuse of power. It was not a planned attack but the tragic lashing out of one of the world's most powerful beings, driven to the brink of sanity by grief and manipulation.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The direct cause of M-Day was Wanda Maximoff, the Scarlet Witch, but her actions can only be understood through the lens of two preceding events: Avengers Disassembled and House of M.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

It is critical to state that M-Day has not occurred in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (Earth-199999). As of the current timeline, the mutant population is only just beginning to be formally introduced, making a mass-depowering event impossible. However, the MCU has laid extensive thematic and character groundwork that strongly echoes the narrative beats leading to M-Day. The arc of Wanda Maximoff in the MCU mirrors that of her comic counterpart in several key ways, suggesting a similar event is narratively possible in the future.

While the MCU's Wanda ultimately sacrifices herself to destroy the Darkhold, her story arc serves as a powerful proof-of-concept for how an M-Day-level event could transpire. Should she return, or should another catalyst present itself, the MCU has established that its version of the Scarlet Witch is fully capable of uttering a phrase that could, for instance, eliminate all mutants from existence.

Part 3: In-Depth Analysis: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath

M-Day was not a single battle or invasion; it was a singular moment of cosmic alteration with devastating, long-lasting consequences. The era that followed is known as the Decimation.

The "Decimation" and Its Immediate Effects

The moment Wanda spoke the words “No more mutants,” a wave of energy swept the globe.

The Aftermath: A Species on the Brink

The world after M-Day was a terrifying new place for the remaining mutants, now a critically endangered species.

The Long Road to Recovery

The Decimation era lasted for years in publishing time, with several major storylines charting mutantkind's struggle to survive and eventually reverse their fate.

Part 4: Key Players & Factions

The Catalyst: Scarlet Witch (Wanda Maximoff)

Wanda was the agent of the Decimation, but she was not a conventional villain. Her actions were born from a lifetime of manipulation, exploitation of her powers by others, and the unimaginable grief of losing her children twice. In the years following M-Day, she suffered from amnesia, living a quiet life until her memories were restored. Her journey became one of atonement, culminating in her crucial role in reversing the Decimation during Avengers vs. X-Men. She has since sought to fully redeem herself in the eyes of mutantkind, a central theme during the Krakoan Age.

The Victims: Mutantkind

The collective trauma of M-Day cannot be overstated. It is the defining event for modern mutant history, equivalent to a holocaust.

The Responders: The X-Men

M-Day fundamentally changed the X-Men. They were no longer simply teachers or superheroes; they were the sole guardians of an entire species. Cyclops's famous line, “There are no more X-Men,” signified the end of the old dream and the beginning of a grim war for survival. The team's tactics became more aggressive and their focus narrowed from global heroism to mutant preservation at all costs.

The Opportunists: Anti-Mutant Factions

Groups like the Purifiers, led by William Stryker, saw M-Day as a divine blessing. They escalated their operations, believing that God had weakened the “demonic” mutants so that humanity could deliver the final blow. Their increased fanaticism and access to advanced technology made them a far more significant threat during the Decimation than ever before.

Part 5: Lasting Legacy & Key Follow-Up Storylines

M-Day's impact is so profound that nearly every major X-Men story for the next decade was a direct consequence of it. Its shadow looms even over the current era.

House of M (The Prequel)

This storyline is the direct and inseparable cause of M-Day. It details the creation of the alternate reality, the heroes' discovery of the truth, and the final confrontation that leads Wanda to utter the fateful words. It is essential reading to understand the “why” of M-Day.

Decimation & The 198

This is the immediate aftermath. The main X-Men titles, alongside the miniseries The 198, detail the initial chaos, the gathering of survivors at the Xavier Institute, and the oppressive occupation by O*N*E's Sentinel Squad. It establishes the bleak, survivalist tone of the new era.

Endangered Species

A direct follow-up storyline where Beast, horrified by the prospect of extinction, embarks on a desperate quest to find a scientific or magical solution to M-Day. He consults with the world's most brilliant and sinister minds—including Doctor Doom, the High Evolutionary, and Dark Beast—only to be met with failure at every turn, cementing the hopelessness of the mutants' situation.

The Messiah Trilogy (Messiah CompleX, Messiah War, & Second Coming)

This epic three-part saga is the central narrative of the Decimation era. It begins with the birth of Hope Summers, the first mutant born since M-Day, and chronicles Cable's desperate mission to protect her across a ravaged future. The trilogy represents the first true “hope” for mutantkind and shows the lengths to which the X-Men will go to protect their future.

Avengers vs. X-Men

This event serves as the definitive end of the Decimation era. The return of the Phoenix Force, sought by the X-Men as a savior and feared by the Avengers as a destroyer, forces the two teams into a devastating global conflict. The event's climax sees Hope Summers and the Scarlet Witch use the Phoenix's power to reignite the X-Gene, ending M-Day's curse and allowing new mutants to be born once more.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

The concept of a mutant-extinction event is a powerful one, and it has been explored in various alternate realities and adaptations.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4)

1)
The number “198” is one of the most frequently discussed and misunderstood figures from this era. It was never meant to be the definitive total of all living mutants on Earth. It was specifically the number of mutants that Sentinel Squad O*N*E could actively identify and track, most of whom were located at the Xavier Institute. The actual number of survivors was known to be higher, though still in the low hundreds.
2)
Brian Michael Bendis has stated in interviews that the line was almost “No more X-Men,” but was changed to “No more mutants” to have a more profound and lasting impact on the entire Marvel Universe, not just one team.
3)
The trauma of M-Day and the subsequent years of fighting for survival as an endangered species became the primary philosophical justification for the creation of the mutant nation of Krakoa. The rallying cry of Krakoa, “Never again,” is a direct response to the near-extinction suffered during the Decimation.
4)
Key source material for the M-Day event and its immediate aftermath includes: House of M #7-8 (2005), New X-Men (Vol. 2) #20-24 (2006), and the Decimation: House of M - The Day After one-shot (2006).