Magik
limited series and is a direct contrast to Kitty's sorrowful name for her, “Darkchilde,” perfectly encapsulating their yin-yang friendship and Illyana's internal struggle.
Illyana Rasputin first appeared as a child in Giant-Size X-Men
#1 (May 1975), created by writer Len Wein and artist Dave Cockrum. She was introduced simply as the six-year-old sister of the newly recruited Russian mutant, Piotr Rasputin (Colossus), serving as a humanizing element for her stoic brother. For several years, she remained a minor supporting character, the innocent child in the bustling, and often dangerous, Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters.
The character's dramatic transformation began under the stewardship of legendary X-Men writer Chris Claremont. In Uncanny X-Men
#160 (August 1982), Illyana was abducted into the demon dimension Limbo. When she returned moments later from the X-Men's perspective, she had aged a decade into a hardened teenager, now wielding mysterious powers and a glowing sword. This was the first appearance of her persona, Magik.
To explain this profound change, Claremont, along with artists John Buscema, Ron Frenz, Sal Buscema, and Tom Palmer, created the seminal four-issue limited series, Magik (Illyana and Storm)
(1983-1984). This series delved into the brutal seven years she spent in Limbo, detailing her enslavement, her training in magic, the forging of the Soulsword, and her eventual conquest of the realm. It was a landmark story for its time, exploring themes of trauma, loss of innocence, and corruption with a maturity that helped define the dark, character-driven tone of the X-Men line for years to come. From this point on, Illyana became a central figure in the spin-off series The New Mutants, where her dark past and formidable powers made her a standout character.
The origin of Illyana Rasputin is a tale of stolen innocence and forged power, one of the most tragic and compelling backstories in the Marvel Universe. However, her journey differs profoundly between the comic books and her live-action adaptation.
Illyana Nikolievna Rasputina was born on the Ust-Ordynsky Collective Farm in Siberia, the youngest of three mutant siblings, including the cosmonaut Mikhail and the future X-Man Piotr (Colossus). When Piotr joined the X-Men, Illyana eventually came to live with him at Xavier's Mansion, a bright and innocent six-year-old girl adored by the team, especially Kitty Pryde. Her life was irrevocably shattered when the demon sorcerer belasco, ruler of the dimension known as Otherplace or Limbo, sensed her innate magical potential and her profound innocence—a perfect vessel for his dark plans. He reached through dimensions and kidnapped the child, pulling her into his hellish domain. While the X-Men immediately pursued, time in Limbo flows differently. The moments it took for the X-Men to rescue her were nearly seven years for Illyana. During this time, she endured unimaginable horrors. Belasco sought to corrupt her soul completely by teaching her black magic, intending to use five magical “bloodstones,” created from parts of her soul, to bring about the reign of his demonic masters, the Elder Gods. However, Belasco's plan was not unopposed within Limbo. The X-Men who had followed her were stranded and twisted by Limbo's influence. An alternate, elderly version of Ororo Munroe (Storm), a powerful sorceress in her own right, took the young Illyana under her wing and taught her benevolent nature magic. Later, she was trained in combat and survival by a feral, alternate version of Kitty Pryde, known as Cat, who had also been trapped and warped by Limbo. Illyana's greatest act of rebellion came when she channeled all her pain, her magical potential, and a piece of her own untainted soul into a physical object. By plunging her hand into the very fabric of Limbo, she manifested the Soulsword, a blade of pure mystical energy. With this weapon, which disrupted all magic, she finally confronted Belasco. She did not kill him but instead defeated and exiled him, claiming his throne and becoming the new Sorcerer Supreme and ruler of Limbo. When she finally found a way back to Earth, she emerged from a teleportation disc as a 13-year-old girl, hardened by years of torment and warfare, shocking her brother and friends who had “lost” her only moments before. This traumatized but powerful teenager, now codenamed Magik, joined the New Mutants, where she began the long, arduous journey of reconciling her human heart with the demonic power she now wielded.
Illyana Rasputin's primary live-action appearance is in the 20th Century Fox film The New Mutants (2020), a movie whose connection to the mainline Marvel Cinematic Universe remains undefined. Portrayed by Anya Taylor-Joy, this version of the character has a significantly altered and more grounded, albeit equally tragic, origin story. In this continuity, Illyana was a victim of a real-world child trafficking ring run by beings she refers to as “the Smiley Men.” The film heavily implies years of horrific abuse. During this period of intense trauma, her mutant powers manifested. Her primary ability is the creation of “stepping discs,” portals that allow her to teleport. The film establishes that these discs pass through the dimension of Limbo, a terrifying, skeletal realm that she describes as a place where she was tormented but also found power. Unlike the comics, her magical abilities, Soulsword, and Eldritch Armor are not the result of years of tutelage under demonic masters or alternate-reality X-Men. Instead, they are presented as direct manifestations of her mutant power, intrinsically linked to her connection to Limbo. The Soulsword is an extension of her will, a weapon she can summon in combat. She is also accompanied by a small purple dragon puppet named Lockheed, which she can bring to life as a real, fire-breathing creature from Limbo. This is a major change from the comics, where Lockheed is an alien dragon and the constant companion of Kitty Pryde. The adaptation streamlines her complex fantasy origin into a more direct psychological horror narrative. The “demons” of her past are tangible, human monsters, and Limbo is less a kingdom to be conquered and more a psychic landscape of her pain. This change serves the film's central theme of young mutants confronting their personal traumas, making Illyana's abrasive, hostile personality a clear and painful defense mechanism against the horrors she endured.
Illyana's power set is a unique and formidable combination of mutant genetics and supreme magical mastery, making her one of the most versatile and powerful members of the X-Men.
The version of Illyana in The New Mutants possesses a similar, but less defined and less developed, set of abilities.
Inferno
event, where they manipulated both Illyana and Madelyne Pryor to launch a full-scale demonic invasion of New York City.This four-issue series is the cornerstone of Illyana's character. It masterfully chronicles the seven years she was trapped in Limbo. The story details her initial terror and enslavement by Belasco, who begins the process of corrupting her soul by creating the bloodstones. It then shows her finding surrogate mentors in the twisted, Limbo-bound versions of Storm and Kitty Pryde, who teach her magic and combat, respectively. The series' climax is a powerful moment of self-actualization, where Illyana rejects both the pure good magic of Storm and the pure evil of Belasco. Instead, she forges her own path by creating the Soulsword from a piece of her own soul, a weapon that is uniquely hers. The series ends with her defeating Belasco and embracing her new, complicated identity as the demon sorceress Magik. It is essential reading for understanding the depth of her trauma and power.
Inferno was a massive, line-wide crossover event that was the culmination of years of Illyana's character arc. The demons S'ym and N'astirh manipulate events on Earth and in Limbo to open a massive, permanent gateway between Limbo and New York City, transforming the metropolis into a living hell. Illyana is at the heart of the crisis, as her own demonic “Darkchilde” persona begins to fully consume her. The event forces her to confront the monster she fears becoming. In a final, desperate act of sacrifice, she rejects the entirety of her magical power and her time in Limbo, casting it all away to close the portal. The result is shocking: the demonic armor crumbles away, leaving behind the innocent, seven-year-old Illyana Rasputin, with no memory of Limbo. This was a major status quo shift that effectively removed Magik from the comics for over a decade.
After years of being deceased (having died from the Legacy Virus as a child), Illyana made her epic return. In the “Quest for Magik” storyline within the pages of New X-Men, the soul of Illyana, now trapped in the form of the demonic Darkchilde, is sensed by Belasco. He draws the students of Xavier's Institute into Limbo, seeking to reclaim his former apprentice. The students fight to save their friends and are instrumental in helping Illyana reclaim her soul. The follow-up series, X-Infernus, sees the newly resurrected Illyana fight to fully reclaim her kingdom from a new threat, the demon-witch Witchfire. By the end of the story, Illyana has fully reintegrated her soul, regained her memories and powers, and definitively retaken her throne as the ruler of Limbo, paving the way for her to rejoin the X-Men as a main character in the modern era.
During this major crossover, Illyana's power level reached its zenith. When the Phoenix Force was fractured, she became one of its five hosts, alongside Cyclops, Emma Frost, Namor, and her brother Colossus. The cosmic entity amplified her already formidable powers to an unimaginable degree. Her teleportation became instantaneous and limitless, and her magic grew to a planetary scale. She used this power to defeat many of Earth's mightiest heroes, at one point imprisoning a large contingent of the Avengers in a fragment of Limbo and torturing them. The event also highlighted the darkness in her soul, as the Phoenix's influence pushed her towards cruelty and arrogance, a dark reflection of the control Belasco once sought over her.
Ultimatum
event. During the massive tidal wave that struck New York, she sacrificed her own life by teleporting the demon Dormammu's giant form away from the battle, being consumed in the process.Magik
limited series and is a direct contrast to Kitty's sorrowful name for her, “Darkchilde,” perfectly encapsulating their yin-yang friendship and Illyana's internal struggle.Uncanny X-Men
#303 (1993). Her death was a pivotal moment that shattered her brother Colossus, causing him to abandon the X-Men and join Magneto's Acolytes out of grief and disillusionment.Magik (Illyana and Storm)
#1-4 (1983-84) for her origin, the Inferno
crossover (1989) for her fall, and the X-Infernus
#1-4 (2008-09) for her modern resurrection and return to power.