In its latest installment, the massively successful nostalgia trip X-Men '97 continues to be a winner for Marvel Animation and its fans new and old - but is the animated series rushing through storylines too quickly?
Titled "Fire Made Flesh," the third episode not only upholds the legacy of its 90s predecessor but also establishes itself as a standout project within the Marvel Studios lineup. However, it does so at the cost of a VERY condensed re-telling of the Inferno crossover in the X-Books from 1989.
Picking up directly from the events of the previous episode, where Magneto was exonerated and Storm left powerless, episode 3 introduces a riveting narrative twist: the emergence of a second Jean Grey at the X Mansion's doorstep. This unexpected development sets the stage for a gripping exploration of identity and deception within the team.
As the episode's plot unfolds, viewers are confronted with the dilemma faced by Cyclops, unsure of which Jean to trust. Through Beast's scientific investigation, it is revealed that the newcomer is the original Jean Grey, while the Jean previously known to the team is a clone.


