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{{short description|Television series}}
{{Infobox television|
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2012}}
| show_name = X-Men: Evolution
{{Infobox television
| image = can any1 coreect this image, place a new team image]
| image = X-Men Evolution.jpg
| caption = The [[X-Men]]
| caption =
| format = [[Animated television series]]
| alt_name =
| runtime = 22 Minutes
| genre = [[Superhero fiction|Superhero]]<br/>[[Action-adventure fiction|Action-adventure]]<br/>[[Drama]]
| creator =
| creator = [[Marty Isenberg]]<br />[[Robert N. Skir]]<br />[[David Wise (writer)|David Wise]]
| starring =
| based_on = {{Based on|[[X-Men]]||[[Stan Lee]]|[[Jack Kirby]]}}
| country = [[United States]]
| developer = John Bush<br />John W. Hyde<br />Jon Vein
| network = [[The WB]]
| writer =
| first_aired =
| director =
| last_aired =
| creative_director =
| num_episodes =
| presenter =
| starring =
| voices = {{Plainlist|
* Meghan Black
* [[Neil Denis]]
* [[David Kaye (voice actor)|David Kaye]]
* [[Scott McNeil]]
* [[Kirby Morrow]]
* [[Maggie Blue O'Hara]]
* [[Brad Swaile]]
* [[Venus Terzo]]
* [[Kirsten Williamson]]
* [[Michael Kopsa]]
}}
| narrated =
| theme_music_composer =
| opentheme =
| endtheme =
| composer = William Kevin Anderson
| country = United States
| language = English
| num_seasons = 4
| num_episodes = 52
| list_episodes = List of X-Men: Evolution episodes
| executive_producer = {{Plainlist|
* [[Avi Arad]]
* [[Rick Ungar]]
* Stan Lee
}}
| producer = {{Plainlist|
* [[Boyd Kirkland]]
* Greg Johnson (season 4)
}}
| editor = {{Plainlist|
* Al Breitenbach (season 1)
* Mark T Collins (seasons 3–4)
}}
| ___location =
| cinematography =
| camera =
| animator = {{plainlist|
* [[Madhouse, Inc.|Madhouse]]
* [[Mook Animation]]
* [[DR Movie]]
}}
| runtime = 20–22 minutes
| company = [[Film Roman]]<br />[[Marvel Studios]]{{efn|Animation outsourced to [[Madhouse (company)|Madhouse]], [[Mook Animation|Mook DLE]], and [[DR Movie]].}}
| channel = [[Kids' WB]]
| first_aired = {{Start date|2000|11|4}}
| last_aired = {{End date|2003|10|25}}
| related =
}}
'''''X-Men: Evolution''''' is an [[animated series]] about the ''[[X-Men]]'' as teenagers and young adults. The series ran for a total of four seasons (52 episodes) on [[WB Television Network|Kids WB]] (despite the fact that [[Warner Bros.]] owned [[DC Comics]], the rivals of the company that created ''X-Men'', [[Marvel Comics]]). The story is set in an [[Parallel universe|alternate]] [[Marvel Universe]], in which [[mutant (fictional)|mutants]] are the only form of super-powered [[superhero|heroes]].
 
'''''X-Men: Evolution''''' is an American [[List of animated television series|animated television series]] based on the [[superhero]] series ''[[X-Men]]'' published by [[Marvel Comics]].<ref>{{cite news|title=The History of Wolverine and the X-Men on TV|website=[[IGN]]|publisher=[[Ziff Davis]]|url=http://uk.tv.ign.com/articles/709/709943p3.html|access-date=August 21, 2010}}</ref> Taking inspiration from the early issues of the original comics, the series portrays the X-Men as teenagers rather than adults, following their struggle to control their [[Mutant (Marvel Comics)|mutant]] powers as they face various threats and backlash. <ref>{{cite book |last1=Erickson |first1=Hal |title=Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 |date=2005 |edition=2nd |publisher=McFarland & Co |isbn=978-1476665993 |pages=926–928}}</ref> ''X-Men: Evolution'' ran for a total of four seasons, comprising 52 episodes in total, from November 4, 2000, to October 25, 2003, on [[Kids' WB]], making it the third longest-running Marvel Comics animated series at the time, behind [[Fox Kids]]' ''[[X-Men: The Animated Series]]'' and ''[[Spider-Man (1994 TV series)|Spider-Man]]''. Seasons one through three aired on [[Cartoon Network]] from August 31, 2001, to May 27, 2003. The series later aired on [[Disney XD]] from June 15, 2009, to December 30, 2011 and was later featured on Disney+.
''X-Men: Evolution'' portrays [[Cyclops (comics)|Cyclops]], [[Jean Grey]], [[Nightcrawler (comics)|Nightcrawler]], [[Rogue (comics)|Rogue]], [[Shadowcat]] and [[Spyke]], a new character, as teenagers attending regular high school in addition to the Xavier Institute. At the latter, [[Professor X]], [[Storm (comics)|Storm]], [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]] and, later, [[Beast (comics)|Beast]] were their teachers. The series, which was aimed at younger children than its predecessor, irked some longtime ''X-Men'' fans but gathered moderate ratings. The first season mainly featured [[Magneto (comics)|Magneto]]'s Brotherhood of Mutants. Later seasons predominantly featured [[Apocalypse (comics)|Apocalypse]] as an adversary and introduced versions of The New Mutants and Magneto's Acolytes. The series ended in [[2003]] after its fourth season.
 
Produced in the United States, the voice recording was done in Canada; and the show was animated in Japan and South Korea. The series was distributed by [[Warner Bros. Television Studios#Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution|Warner Bros. Television Distribution]] during its original run and is currently distributed by [[Disney Platform Distribution]] in the United States.
''X-Men: Evolution'' won the award for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Live Action and Animation at the 30th [[Emmy Award|Annual Daytime Emmy Awards]], on [[May 16]] 2003.
 
==Plot outline==
===Season 1===
{{spoiler}}
The first season introduces the core characters of the series. The titular team, founded by [[Professor Charles Xavier]], competes with [[Mystique (character)|Mystique]] to recruit young mutants with newly discovered [[Superpower (ability)|superpowers]] to their cause. At the [[Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters]], the teenage X-Men are taught by Xavier, [[Wolverine (character)|Wolverine]], and [[Storm (Marvel Comics)|Storm]] to control their abilities and keep them hidden from the rest of society whilst attending high school in the fictional [[Upstate New York]] town of Bayville.<ref name="Ten years tough for X-Men">Evan Levine [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=y94vAAAAIBAJ&sjid=tTsDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4190,2099465 Ten years tough for X-Men] ''Rome News-Tribune'' – November 21, 2000. Retrieved June 8, 2011</ref> Their ranks grow over the course of the season and ultimately include [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)|Cyclops]], [[Jean Grey]], [[Nightcrawler (character)|Nightcrawler]], [[Shadowcat]], [[Spyke]], and [[Rogue (Marvel Comics)|Rogue]], who is initially manipulated into joining Mystique's [[Brotherhood of Mutants|Brotherhood of Bayville]].
[[Image:JuggernautEvolution.jpg|right|270px||thumb|The ''X-Men'' face off against [[Juggernaut (comics)|Juggernaut]].]]
''X-Men: Evolution'' is set in the generic city of [[Bayville]]. Contrary to most X-Men continuity, it is not clearly established where the city of Bayville is located, but we are led to believe it may be in the [[New York City|New York]] area. Furthermore, in the early part of the series (until the end of season 2) most people are unaware of the existence of mutants. It is also important to note that "The Brotherhood" team is not known as "The Brotherhood of Evil Mutants" within the context of this series. They are not a team of terrorists or mutant supremacists, instead, The Brotherhood is made up of misfit mutants who often oppose the X-Men.
 
While the X-Men teach their recruits to exercise restraint and uphold responsibility, Mystique encourages the Brotherhood to recklessly use their powers for selfish gain. The juvenile delinquents inducted into the Brotherhood consist of [[Avalanche (character)|Avalanche]], [[Toad (Marvel Comics)|Toad]], [[Blob (Marvel Comics)|Blob]], and [[Quicksilver (Marvel Comics)|Quicksilver]]. The mastermind behind Mystique and the Brotherhood is eventually revealed to be [[Magneto (Marvel Comics)|Magneto]], a shadowy and mysterious figure from Xavier's past who seeks to enable mutants to replace humans as the dominant species on the planet. Nightcrawler also learns that he is Mystique's biological son, who was lost to her long ago due to Magneto's interference.
Most of the first season is spent introducing the characters. During this time the X-Men recruit Rogue, who at first is frightened and then angry at the X-Men, slowly learning to trust the others over the course of several episodes. Although it is immediately clear to most fans of X-Men that the mysterious leader of Mystique's team is Magneto, this information is not explicitly revealed until the end of the season, in a two-part episode called "[[The Cauldron (X-Men: Evolution episode)|The Cauldron]]."
 
Other villains in the season are Wolverine's old rival [[Sabretooth (character)|Sabretooth]], Xavier's vengeful half-brother [[Juggernaut (character)|Juggernaut]], and [[Weapon X]] professor [[Professor Thorton|Andre Thorton]].
In the second season, the Xavier Institute took on a number of additional students, sometimes known as "The New Mutants." For the most part, they are fairly minor characters in the series. Bobby Drake, aka Iceman, eventually becomes a full member of the X-Men.
[[Image:RogueGambit.jpg|right|250px||thumb|[[Rogue (comics)|Rogue]] and [[Gambit (comics)|Gambit.]]]]
Most of the episodes focus on characters developing relationships, loyalty and the importance of team-work. The season concludes with the two-part episode "The Day of Reckoning" in which the X-Men and the Brotherhood join up to fight Magneto's new team, and end up revealing the existence of mutants to the world.
 
===Season 2===
The third season moves the story closer to traditional X-Men continuity, in that many of the stories are about overcoming hatred, intolerance and racism. There is a strong streak of revenge related plotlines in this season as well. The season concludes with the two-part episode "Dark Horizon" in which the powerful mutant Apocalypse is finally freed from captivity.
Season two focuses on the continuing conflict between the X-Men, Magneto, and Mystique. [[Beast (Marvel Comics)|Beast]] joins the X-Men as a teacher while a cohort of [[New Mutants|new mutants]] are added to their ranks, including [[Iceman (Marvel Comics)|Iceman]], [[Magma (character)|Magma]], [[Jubilee (character)|Jubilee]], [[Cannonball (Marvel Comics)|Cannonball]], [[Berzerker (comics)|Berzerker]], [[Jamie Madrox|Multiple]], [[Sunspot (Marvel Comics)|Sunspot]], [[Wolfsbane (character)|Wolfsbane]], and [[Tabitha Smith|Boom Boom]], who soon leaves the team and becomes a neutral character. The season also introduces [[Warren Worthington III|Angel]], who uses his powers to help people independently but chooses not to join the X-Men.
 
Cyclops and Jean grow closer, creating a [[love triangle]] when Rogue develops a crush on Cyclops, while Shadowcat and Avalanche begin dating despite being on opposing sides.
Season four, for the most part, is rather chaotic. Many fans believe that this is because the creators of the series knew they were likely to be cancelled at the end of the season. Several interesting plotlines are created, but never given the chance to advance. The only real focus to the season is the slow build of power that Apocalypse is working towards. The final episodes in the season (and the series) are called "Ascension" in which Apocalypse kidnaps a number of powerful main characters to serve as his agents in the destruction of humanity.
 
The X-Men are faced with several threats: Mystique strikes off with the Brotherhood and recruits the [[Scarlet Witch]], Magneto's abandoned daughter and Quicksilver's sister, to seek revenge; [[Mesmero]] plots to free the ancient mutant [[Apocalypse (character)|Apocalypse]]; and Magneto forms a new group of mutant followers called the [[Acolytes (comics)|Acolytes]], comprising Sabretooth, [[Gambit (Marvel Comics)|Gambit]], [[Pyro (Marvel Comics)|Pyro]], and [[Colossus (character)|Colossus]]. The existence of mutants is ultimately revealed to the world when Magneto pits the X-Men and the Brotherhood against [[Bolivar Trask]]'s anti-mutant weapon, the [[Sentinel (comics)|Sentinel]]. The X-Men discover that Mystique has been posing as Xavier, who is now missing.
===Series Finale===
[[Image:XMEFullRoster.jpg|right|300px||thumb|The entire roster as seen in the season finale]]
The series ends with a speech by Charles Xavier, who had caught a glimpse of the future while being mind-controlled by Apocalypse. Following future scenarios are foreseen:
 
===Season 3===
*Anti-mutant sentiment continues.
Season three focuses on the rising tension and hostility between mutants and humans. After Xavier is found and rescued, the X-Men attempt to rebuild their normal lives in Bayville and continue using their powers for good, though they face public scrutiny and discrimination from the other students at school.
*The Sentinels attack, led by a Super Sentinel which is hinted to be Nimrod or Master Mold.
*A reformed Magneto becomes the teacher of the New Mutants.
*Jean Grey is transformed into [[Phoenix (comics)|Dark Phoenix]]. This happens apparently a few years after the last episode.
*The future X-Men seem to consist of adult versions of Cyclops, Boom-Boom, Iceman, Jean Grey, Nightcrawler, Shadowcat, Rogue (able to fly), plus Storm and Colossus. Wolverine is missing and therefore hinted to have retired or passed away. The uniforms these future X-Men wear look very much like the dark uniforms in the ''[[Ultimate X-Men]]'' comic. Only X-23 (who had a dark uniform from the start) looks the same. This shot is probably from a few years after the last episode.
*The last scene (see picture to the right) shows the entire cast, thus X-Men and New Mutants, plus the previously unaligned Gambit and Angel, who are hinted to have joined the X-Mansion. Jubilee and Wolfsbane have also returned. This shot is probably set a few days after the last episode.
*The Brotherhood and Pyro join [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]].
 
The X-Men are forced to contend with numerous personal struggles: Cyclops is abducted and left for dead by Mystique; Spyke leaves the team to join the sewer-dwelling [[Morlocks (comics)|Morlocks]] when his mutation rapidly advances; Nightcrawler overcomes his insecurities about his appearance; Rogue learns that Mystique is her adoptive mother and loses control of her powers; and Wolverine discovers that he has a teenage clone called [[X-23]], who was created by [[Hydra (comics)|Hydra]] to be trained and used as a weapon.
==Comic book spin-offs==
 
Meanwhile, Magneto enlists [[Mastermind (Jason Wyngarde)|Mastermind]] to alter Scarlet Witch's memories to end her vendetta against him; and Mesmero manipulates Mystique and hypnotizes Rogue into helping him resurrect Apocalypse, who defeats the combined forces of the X-Men, the Brotherhood, and the Acolytes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/21956/x-men-evolution-the-complete-third-season/|title=X-Men Evolution - The Complete Third Season|website=dvdtalk.com}}</ref>
In [[January 2002]], [[Marvel Comics]] began publishing a [[manga]]-style [[comic book]] series partially based on the show. It was abruptly cancelled after the 12th issue. [[X-23]], an original character introduced in the later part of the show, first appeared in comic books in ''[[NYX]]'', albeit in a slightly different version than in the cartoon, and got her own self-titled comic series in [[2005]]. Much like [[Harley Quinn]] of ''[[Batman: The Animated Series]]'', a character created for the cartoons has entered comic continuity.
 
===Season 4===
Recently, Spyke has also joined the X men team in the comics.
Season four focuses on the aftermath of the X-Men's failed attempt to prevent Apocalypse's revival. The Brotherhood try their hand at heroism, only for their selfish tendencies to prevail; Wolverine and X-23 work together to bring down Hydra; Xavier confronts his estranged son [[Legion (Marvel Comics)|David]]; Spyke and the Morlocks begin fighting back against human prejudice; Shadowcat befriends [[Danielle Moonstar]]; and Rogue pushes Mystique's petrified statue off a cliff, creating a rift between her and Nightcrawler, which causes her to seek redemption by helping Gambit to rescue his father.
 
Apocalypse captures and transforms Xavier, Storm, Magneto, and Mystique into his [[Horsemen of Apocalypse|Four Horsemen]] as he attempts to turn the human population into mutants. During the final battle, the X-Men and their allies defeat the Horsemen, who are returned to normal, while Rogue absorbs the powers of [[Leech (character)|Dorian Leach]] to neutralize Apocalypse. In the aftermath, Rogue and Nightcrawler rebuff Mystique's attempt to make amends; Magneto reconciles with Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch; Shadowcat and Avalanche rekindle their relationship; Spyke reconnects with his aunt Storm; and Xavier sees his students reunited as the X-Men.
==Teams==
===The X-Men team===
[[Image:Wolverinevo.PNG|150px|The two incarnations of Wolverine, from ''X-Men: Evolution''.|thumb|right]]
'''Mentors'''
*[[Professor X]] (Charles Xavier), voiced by [[David Kaye]]. Professor Xavier is the team's mentor and financier. He is very similar to his comic book counterpart, only more casual. Like the comic Professor X, he is still somewhat secretive, if only for the protection of his students.
*[[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]] (Logan), voiced by [[Scott McNeil]]. Though similar in most ways to the classic Wolverine, the Evolution version has been seriously toned down, and is designed to be more of a role model for the students. As a side note, he is the only X-Man to change his uniform (see picture): at the beginning, he wears an incarnation of his classic yellow-black uniform with his characteristic bladed mask, but then swaps it for a dark, maskless uniform very similar to the version found in the ''[[Ultimate X-Men]]'' comic.
*[[Storm (comics)|Storm]] (Ororo Monroe), voiced by [[Kirsten Williamson]]. Storm is very similar to her comic counterpart; in fact, there appear to be no real differences. Storm has a habit of suddenly disappearing throughout the series, apparently because the producers don't really have much for her to do.
*[[Beast (comics)|Beast]] (Hank McCoy), voiced by [[Mike Kopsa]], (Joined in the second season). Beast is similar to his comic counterpart in most ways, though the Evolution version speaks more casually. He was originally a gym coach and chemistry teacher at Bayville High before his latent transformation into the Beast forced him to retire and join the X-Men, where he could still be a teacher.
 
The series ends with a speech by Xavier, having caught a glimpse of the near future in Apocalypse's mind that shows:
====Students====
* Continued anti-mutant sentiment at [[Capitol Hill]].
*[[Cyclops (comics)|Cyclops]] (Scott Summers), voiced by [[Kirby Morrow]]. Cyclops is toned down from his comic book counterpart, less stiff and with a greater sense of humor, and in contrast to many other incarnations, Cyclops is not the aloof, doubtful loner, but a handsome and confident leader who exudes a lot of natural authority. All the other students look up to him. He is the most officious and rule-abiding of the X-Men and the least likely to fool around. After season 3, Cyclops & Jean Grey began teaching the younger students at the Xavier Institute how to better control & utilise their powers.
* A reformed Magneto as a new instructor at Xavier's institute.
*[[Jean Grey]] (no codename), voiced by [[Venus Terzo]]. She was the "Miss Popular" of the X-Men, smart, athletic, beautiful, popular and the second-in-command after Cyclops. She does have more insecurities than her comic book counterpart, as well as a jealous streak when it comes to Cyclops, though. After season 3, Cyclops & Jean began teaching the younger students at the Xavier Institute how to better control & utilise their powers.
* Jean being consumed by the all-powerful [[Phoenix Force]]. Had the series continued, the fifth season would have focused on the ''[[The Dark Phoenix Saga|Dark Phoenix]]'' saga with her becoming an enemy of the X-Men.
*[[Rogue (comics)|Rogue]] (Marie), voiced by [[Meghan Black]]. A serious departure from the comic Rogue, the Evolution Rogue is a reclusive goth with paranoia issues. She has a great deal of angst over her powers, which keep her from ever safely touching anyone. She had a long term crush on Cyclops, but later developed a flirtatious relationship with Gambit.
* The future X-Men team consisting of Cyclops, Nightcrawler, Shadowcat, Storm, Beast, Iceman, Colossus, X-23, and Rogue, who is now capable of flight and no longer wearing gloves.
*[[Nightcrawler (comics)|Nightcrawler]] (Kurt Wagner), voiced by [[Brad Swaile]]. The humorist of the team, the Evolution Nightcrawler's very similar to his comic version and has a friendly big-brother relationship with Cyclops. The comic Nightcrawler's strong Catholic beliefs appear to have vanished, but this is likely due to censorship issues. He speaks with a [[German language|German]] accent.
* The Brotherhood, including Pyro reforming and joining [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]] as the [[Freedom Force (comics)|Freedom Force]].
*[[Shadowcat]] (Kitty Pryde), voiced by [[Maggie Blue O'Hara]]. Kitty Pryde is the brainiac of the team, though she was given a thick valley girl accent, which was reduced and eventually phased out after the first season. Unlike her comic version, she is not the youngest member of the team, but is still very naive. The strongest departure in her character is her on-off relationship with Avalanche.
* A fleet of Sentinels led by [[Nimrod (comics)|Nimrod]].
*[[Spyke]] (Evan Daniels), voiced by [[Neil Denis]]. An entirely new character (an African-American created to add ethnic diversity), Spyke is also Storm's nephew. He appears to have typical teenanger issues and is meant to be the rebel of the team. Fans have not taken kindly to Spyke, who they see as a pre-packaged and shallow character. In the third season, Spyke left to join the Morlocks and made a guest appearance in the fourth season, where he was seen as a protector of oppressed mutants. Many of Spyke's critics liked the change in his character, but he is still viewed as the posterchild for the negative aspects of the series. This character may be based on the comic character Marrow. Both project their bones out of their bodies and both have connections to the Morlocks.
* A final photographic portrait of the full X-Men roster, including new members [[Havok (character)|Havok]], Angel, Gambit, Colossus, and X-23.
 
===New Mutants=Episodes==
{{Main|List of X-Men: Evolution episodes|l1=List of ''X-Men: Evolution'' episodes}}
As a whole, the New Mutants didn't have a significant role in the series. They were added in the second season of the show for two reasons; the first was to make the Xavier Institute seem more populated by having several students in the background; and the second was to please vocal fans. During the show's four-season run, the New Mutants remained in the background, and only in a few instances did any of them contribute to an episode's plot. Most often, they were relegated to sub-plots or background gags. As a result, few of them are well-developed and fans have generally assumed that they share the same personalities and traits as their comic-book counterparts.
{{:List of X-Men: Evolution episodes}}
*[[Iceman (comics)|Iceman]] (Bobby Drake, later promoted to the X-Men), voiced by [[Andrew Francis]]. The most outgoing and cocky of the new recruits, and later became a standby X-Man.
*[[Wolfsbane (comics)|Wolfsbane]] (Rahne Sinclair), voiced by [[Chantal Strand]]. She only spoke in one episode and was altogether removed from the cast in the third season, but returned in a cameo during the series finale.
*[[Cannonball (comics)|Cannonball]] (Sam Guthrie), voiced by [[Bill Switzer]]. The most noticeable role for Cannonball was his challenging Wolverine to a motorcycle race, with the other New Mutants using their powers to create obstacles. In a close charge down the finish line, Cannonball took the lead... Then proceeded to try and show-up Wolverine further, by using his powers to gain a larger lead; only for him to go over a bump and lose control of the bike. Wolverine then acknowledged that Sam had him beat, until he 'went all Cannonball on [Wolverine]'. He also tried to use his powers to break through the mansion's security doors after Mystique sent the mansion into Defcon 5 - Which would ultimately cause the self-destruction of the complex. Despite make several rather large dents, Sam didn't break through, and was left rather dizzy.
*[[Magma (comics)|Magma]] (Amara Aquila), voiced by [[Alexandra Carter]]. The only New Mutant who was the lead character of an episode ("Cruise Control"). After Iceman, Magma is the New Mutant who was given the most attention by the writers. She has been altered in appearance from her comic book incarnation, where she is an older teen with blond hair and blue eyes, whereas in Evolution, she is fully Brazillian with brown hair and brown eyes.
*[[Berzerker (comics)|Berzerker]] (Ray Crisp), voiced by [[Tony Sampson]]. A big departure from the mainstream continuity, where he is an extremely violent [[Morlock]].
*[[Sunspot (comics)|Sunspot]] (Roberto Da Costa), voiced by [[Mike Coleman]]. Like Wolfsbane, he only spoke in one episode (in fact, the same one that featured Wolfsbane), but was shown to be a perfectionist and an overachiever.
*[[Jubilee (comics)|Jubilee]] (Jubilation Lee), voiced by [[Chiara Zanni]]. Unlike the [[X-Men: The Animated Series|original show]], she has only a very minor role. She retained the playfulness of her comic counterpart, and was often involved with Bobby's antics. She was removed in the third season, but appeared in a cameo during the season finale.
*[[Multiple Man|Multiple]] (Jamie Madrox), voiced by [[David A. Kaye]]. The youngest of the bunch and constantly picked on by his older peers. He also seems to have a crush on Shadowcat.
 
===TheCast Brotherhood=and characters==
[[File:XMEFullRoster.jpg|240px|thumb|right|The full X-Men roster seen in the series finale]]
{{Main|List of X-Men: Evolution characters|l1=List of ''X-Men: Evolution'' characters}}
 
* [[Professor X|Professor Charles Xavier]] (voiced by [[David Kaye (voice actor)|David Kaye]]) is the [[Telepathy|telepathic]] founder and pacifistic leader of the X-Men. Nicknamed "Professor X" by his students, he remains somewhat secretive to protect the young mutants in his care. Although he often emphasizes the importance of keeping their powers hidden from the rest of the world, Xavier remains hopeful that mutants and humans can one day coexist peacefully.
The Brotherhood are an oddity in that they started out as villains, but as the series progressed, fell more into the role of casual wild cards not because of shifting ideology, but because they had become lazy and simply stopped caring about their original cause. While the X-Men represent the ideal of mutant responsibility, the Brotherhood represent the reality, wasting their powers on selfish, small-time interests. They were little more than a plot device during the first season (often an excuse to have the X-Men fight somebody), but from the second season onward, they semi-retired from costumed villainy and were most often seen hanging out in their run-down house, only sometimes committing crimes to pay bills. Despite their on-going contempt for the X-Men, they have been known to team up with their rivals, often voluntarily.
* [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)|Scott Summers / Cyclops]] (voiced by [[Kirby Morrow]]) is the disciplined and responsible field leader of the X-Men. His eyes constantly emit powerful energy beams known as "optic blasts", which can only be controlled by his ruby-quartz glasses and visor. Scott harbors romantic affections for his best friend Jean, but only confesses his feelings for her in the third season, after which they begin dating.
* [[Jean Grey]] (voiced by [[Venus Terzo]]) is a popular girl with powerful telepathic and [[Telekinesis|telekinetic]] abilities. She finds herself romantically torn between Duncan Matthews and Scott, until she and Scott begin dating in the third season.
* [[Spyke|Evan Daniels / Spyke]] (voiced by [[Neil Denis]]) is Ororo's playful and stubborn nephew and the youngest member of the X-Men. He has the ability to project bone-like protrusions from his skin. In the third season, Evan leaves the X-Men to join the Morlocks after losing control of his powers.
* [[Wolverine (character)|Logan / Wolverine]] (voiced by [[Scott McNeil]]) is the "gruff uncle" of the X-Men and the strict instructor in charge of the young mutants' combat and survival training. He possesses heightened senses, a regenerative healing factor and an indestructible [[adamantium]] skeleton with retractable hand claws. Logan has also shown a softer side as a protective surrogate father to both his clone X-23 and Rogue after she loses control of her powers.
* [[Storm (Marvel Comics)|Ororo Munroe / Storm]] (voiced by [[Kirsten Williamson]]) is Evan's aunt and a wise mentor to the X-Men who can harness the forces of nature and manipulate the weather. She was previously worshipped due to her ability to summon the rains.
* [[Rogue (Marvel Comics)|Rogue]] (voiced by Meghan Black) is a sullen and reclusive [[Goth subculture|goth]] girl who can absorb the life force, attributes, memories, and powers of anyone through physical touch. She is Mystique's adopted daughter and Kurt's foster sister. Rogue is initially tricked into joining the Brotherhood of Mutants before defecting to the X-Men. She develops an unrequited crush on Scott but eventually becomes attracted to Gambit, an Acolyte working for Magneto.
* [[Kitty Pryde|Kitty Pryde / Shadowcat]] (voiced by [[Maggie Blue O'Hara]]) is an upbeat and cheerful [[valley girl]] who can become intangible. She is the second youngest member of the X-Men and develops a close friendship with Kurt over the course of the series. Despite being on opposing teams, Kitty begins dating Avalanche of the Brotherhood of Mutants in the second season.
* [[Nightcrawler (character)|Kurt Wagner / Nightcrawler]] (voiced by [[Brad Swaile]]) is the blue-furred prankster of the X-Men with the ability to teleport. He is Mystique's biological son and Rogue's foster brother. Kurt develops a close friendship with Kitty and his penchant for excessive goofiness initially clashes with Scott's rule-abiding leadership. He is insecure about his appearance and given a holographic image inducer that allows him to blend in at school, though he comes to embrace his true self over the course of the series.
* [[Beast (Marvel Comics)|Hank McCoy / Beast]] (voiced by [[Michael Kopsa]]) is a mild-mannered intellectual with a repressed, feral alternative mutant personality. He initially works as a gym coach and chemistry teacher at Bayville High School before his latent transformation forces him to retire and join the X-Men as a mentor in the second season.
 
==Music==
*[[Mystique (comics)|Mystique]] (Raven Darkholme, leader, when present), voiced by [[Colleen Wheeler]]. Mystique is similar to her comic counterpart, with very few differences. In early appearances, she used her real name as the disguised principal of Bayville High, Ms. Darkholme, to spy on the X-Men and keep an eye on the Brotherhood. Despite being their leader, Mystique is not considered part of the core Brotherhood team, mainly because after the first season, she spends most of her time away from the team. As a side note, Mystique is also the only villain to change her uniform: in the beginning, she is wearing a white tunic similar to the incarnations in the mainstream comics and ''[[X-Men: The Animated Series]]'', but later changes into a more practical outfit consisting of a tight black top with matching miniskirt and built-in knickers.
''X-Men: Evolution'' featured several songs that were produced exclusively for the show:
*[[Avalanche (comics)|Avalanche]] (Lance Alvers), voiced by [[Christopher Grey]]. This version of Avalanche has almost nothing in common with the original character. Here, he is Lance Alvers (the original was Dominic Petros), and he is the Brotherhood's field leader and has a rivarly with Cyclops. Avalanche is often irrational and driven by his temper, but as the series progressed, Avalanche was more reluctant to be a villain, and even started to lapse into an almost heroic position, at one point quitting the Brotherhood to enroll at Xavier's school. Most of this has been triggered by his relationship with the X-Men's Shadowcat.
* "Only a Girl (The Bayville Sirens' Theme)" in "Walk on the Wild Side".
*[[Quicksilver (comics)|Quicksilver]] (Pietro Maximoff), voiced by [[Richard Ian Cox]]. Unlike Avalanche, Quicksilver retains most of his original counterpart's personality traits, including his impatience and arrogance. The similarities end there- this Quicksilver is a self-serving villain who will betray even his own friends to save himself. He is loyal to his father, Magneto, only out of convenience. Though he has a hand in betraying his sister Wanda, he grows to care for his sister as the series progresses.
* "T-O-A-D (Toad's Theme)" in "The Toad, the Witch and the Wardrobe".
*[[Toad (comics)|Toad]] (Todd Tolensky), voiced by [[Noel Fisher]]. Less sycophantic than the original Toad, this one is a weasely punk kid with a wise guy attitude. He seems to revel in his own weirdness and feigns confidence, but is ultimately a coward who sticks with his bigger friends for protection. This version of Toad has gathered a large fan following. Like Avalanche, Toad is given another name in this version (the original being Mortimer Toynbee).
* "Who Am I Now? (Rogue's Theme)" in "Rogue Recruit".
*[[Scarlet Witch]] (Wanda Maximoff), voiced by [[Kelly Sheridan]]. In direct contrast to the original Wanda Maximoff, this Scarlet Witch is near-homicidal. She was locked in an asylum by Magneto because he could no longer control her vast powers, and she grew up bitter and vengeful. She was released by Mystique to help her in her own revenge against Magneto. Eventually, Wanda's memories were altered by Mastermind and she believed her father to be kind and caring.
* "Wolverine (Wolverine's Theme)" in a promotional video.
*[[Blob (comics)|Blob]] (Fred Dukes), voiced by [[Michael Dobson]]. Like the comic version, this Blob is a bully with a big mouth and a small brain. Unlike the comic version, this Blob seems to hide a sensitive side (as seen by the rather obsessive way he treated Jean in the first episode he appeared). He is also one of the few characters to change aspects of his physical appearance throughout the series.
* "Evolution Theme (Theme Song)" in the start of the show.
 
The theme and score for ''X-Men: Evolution'' was composed and produced by William Kevin Anderson. Several characters had distinct musical cues, including [[Avalanche (character)|Avalanche]] (heavy guitar riffs), [[Storm (Marvel Comics)|Storm]] (orchestra piece), and [[Apocalypse (character)|Apocalypse]] (Egyptian music). Others had special sound effects. These include Jean Grey (light chime noise), [[Sabretooth (character)|Sabretooth]] (roaring), [[Rogue (Marvel Comics)|Rogue]] (also has a unique, black and white special effect), [[Magneto (Marvel Comics)|Magneto]], [[Gambit (Marvel Comics)|Gambit]], [[Shadowcat]], and [[Nightcrawler (character)|Nightcrawler]]. The main theme song was recorded by Anderson.
===Magneto's Acolytes===
When the original Brotherhood fell out of Magneto's favor (due to both incompetence and uncertain loyalty), he created a new team. Though never named on-screen, they are referred to as The Acolytes, named after Magneto's second-most famous team from the comics (the first, of course, being the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants). Sabretooth and Quicksilver were retained, but the rest of the team was brand new and first revealed during the second season finale, "Day of Reckoning," where despite being quite smaller in number than the combined forces of the X-Men and the Brotherhood, held their own against both. They were the primary threat against the X-Men in season three, until the threat of Apocalypse sidetracks Magneto.
*[[Magneto (comics)|Magneto]] (Erik Lehnsherr), voiced by [[Christopher Judge]]. A powerful, charismatic mutant supremacist, essentially unchanged from his comic book version, but toned down a bit so that he appears more a manipulator than a terrorist. In addition, the ambiguous nature of Magneto's personality has been changed to make him a more effective villain.
*[[Gambit (comics)|Gambit]] (Remy LeBeau), voiced by [[Alessandro Juliani]]. Cast as a [[Long John Silver]]-type villain, this Gambit is outwardly similar to the original Gambit, but is different in that he is a willing accomplice to Magneto. The Evolution version of Gambit has also shown signs of [[antisocial personality disorder]], and though from time to time he will do something that can be considered good, he has shown that he is not above outright manipulation of innocents to achieve his goal. However, his soft spot for Rogue is sincere, and it is strongly implied that he joined the X-Men not long afterward.
*[[Colossus (comics)|Colossus]] (Piotr Rasputin), voiced by [[Michael Adamthwaite]]. Very similar to his comic counterpart. In this version, he is pressured into serving Magneto, who has abducted his family.
*[[Pyro (comics)|Pyro]] (St. John Allerdyce), voiced by [[Michael Dobson]]. A mad [[pyromaniac]] with a cackling laugh and a thick [[Strine]] accent. The original Pyro was more controlled, whereas this version's affinity for destruction and complete ignorance of consequence border on outright insanity. He became infamous among the fandom for a scene in the fourth season where he is seen watching footage of Magneto's supposed demise at the hands of Apocalypse, rewinding, playing back, and laughing several times.
*[[Sabretooth (comics)|Sabretooth]] (Victor Creed), voiced by [[Michael Donovan]]. A violent brawler who has a deep enmity against Wolverine, but not the [[psychotic]] killer of the comics.
*[[Quicksilver (comics)|Quicksilver]] (Pietro Maximoff) is a member of both the Acolytes and the Brotherhood. After his betrayal of the Brotherhood in "Day of Reckoning," he appeared with the Acolytes, but was sent back to the Brotherhood in "Stuff of Villains" to train them for future service to Magneto. Just why Magneto wanted the team back, considering he had discarded them for incompetence, is never made clear. It can speculated that perhaps Magneto found his son bothersome and wanted him out of the way.
*[[Mastermind (comics)|Mastermind]] (Jason Wyngarde), voiced by [[Campbell Lane]], is the group's telepath, though his membership on the team appears to be unofficial, as he seldom appears. Mastermind has no obvious differences from his comic counterpart (other than an uglier appearance), except that he is far less ambitious and is very afraid of Magneto. Strangely, despite looking like a common criminal, Mastermind sounds educated.
 
==Production notes==
===HYDRA===
The original working title of the show while in production was ''Children of the Atom'', a reference to the X-Men comic book in circulation. However, this was scrapped as the network did not want the title to reference children.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bobulinksi |first1=Andrew |last2=Blake |first2=Kinsey |title=An Interview with Robert N. Skir |url=https://conventionalrelations.net/2020/11/11/an-interview-with-robert-n-skir/ |website=conventionalrelations.net |date=November 11, 2020 |access-date=20 April 2024}}</ref>
*[[Viper (comics)|Viper]]
One of the main points of the new ''X-Men: Evolution'' concept was the design of the new costumes. Early concept art sketches show the X-Men in classic gold-and-black garb. In these drafts, Spyke wears [[cornrows]], Rogue's outfit exposes her midriff, and Jean Grey's costume is the female version of Cyclops' costume. Both Jean Grey and Shadowcat wear face masks, and Kitty is also wearing an orange miniskirt and [[Dr. Martens|Doc Martens]] over spandex. Early Storm drawings show her wearing white rather than black.{{Citation needed|date=October 2008}}
*[[Omega Red]] (Arkady Rossovich), voiced by [[Richard Newman]].
*[[Gauntlet (comics)|Gauntlet]], voiced by [[Mark Gibbons]].
 
A point of controversy was the design of the blue-skinned villain Mystique. [[Steven E. Gordon]], the character designer and director of various episodes, was never impressed with the Mystique designs for the first season. Mystique was originally to be presented as nude, akin to her [[Mystique (film character)|film counterpart]], but Warner Bros. did not want this included in a Kids' WB! production.<ref name="animationage">{{Cite web |url=http://marvel.toonzone.net/xmenevo/interviews/gordon/ |title=Marvel Animation Age Presents: X-Men: Evolution |access-date=June 17, 2006 |archive-date=March 4, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304023216/http://marvel.toonzone.net/xmenevo/interviews/gordon/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> However, a short scene of Mystique drawn to resemble her film counterpart (albeit clothed) appears in the Season 1 finale. Gordon stopped directing after two seasons, but continued to design characters for the show. He is most satisfied with the designs of Rogue and Scarlet Witch.<ref name="animationage"/>
===Neutral mutants===
*[[Meltdown (comics)|Boom-Boom]] (Tabitha Smith), voiced by [[Megan Leitch]], sometime member of both the X-Men and The Brotherhood. Originally one of the New Mutants, she felt that she didn't fit in and moved in with the Brotherhood, who did nothing to stop her. Though she mooched off of them for a while, she left following Mystique's return. Since then, she appears to be living on her own, but her loyalty is with the X-Men.
*[[Morlocks (comics)|The Morlocks]]. The Morlocks made several appearances on the show. The characters included [[Callisto]], the leader of the group, who has enhanced senses; [[Caliban (comics)|Caliban]], a chalk-white character able to detect the presence of other mutants; [[Cybelle]], an African-American female with an acid touch; [[Torpid]], the mute little girl with the huge hands, who possesses a paralyzing touch; and [[Lucid]], a froglike mutant who can see through solid objects. Two other Morlocks, [[Scaleface]] (who can shapeshift into a fire-breathing reptillian creature) and [[Facade]] (who can blend into his surroundings) appeared in one episode each.
*[[X-23]], voiced by [[Brittney Irvin]].
*[[Angel (comics)|Angel]] (Warren Worthington) worked with the X-Men on occasional missions.
*[[Forge (comics)|Forge]], voiced by [[Samuel Vincent]], in great contrast to his comic counterpart, is a Bayville High student and mutant inventor from the late 1970's who was trapped in a pocket dimension he called "middleverse" for several years. Only when Nightcrawler found his way there and the X-Men found a way to free him did Forge return, though he was twenty years late for his curfew. While he is an ally of the X-Men, he only appeared once more to test equipment that would enhance Nightcrawler's teleportation range, at the cost of releasing extra-dimensional monsters into the world.
*[[Havok|Alex Summers]] (Alex Masters/Summers, Cyclop's brother), voiced by [[Matt Hill]]. Long believed to be dead, Alex (who was adopted by the Masters family) is reunited with his brother Scott, though Alex has come under the influence of Magneto, leading Scott away from the X-Men. Eventually, Alex and Scott realize that Magneto has tricked them and help put an end to his plans. Alex turns down an offer to join the X-Men, preferring to stay in Hawaii and become a professional surfer.
 
The show also contained various pop culture references: in episode 9 of the first season, one of Wolverine's defensive programs for the [[Danger Room]] is referred to as "Logan's Run X13", a reference to the novel/film ''[[Logan's Run]]''. The Rogue/Kitty dance in "Spykecam" was modeled after a similar dance in the ''[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV series)|Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]'' episode "[[Bad Girls (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)|Bad Girls]]".<ref name="beyondevo">{{Cite web |url=http://x-men.toonzone.net/qaboyd.php |title=Beyond Evolution: X-Men Evolution |access-date=June 27, 2006 |archive-date=July 4, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060704075118/http://x-men.toonzone.net/qaboyd.php |url-status=dead }}</ref> The play used in "Spykecam", ''Dracula: The Musical'', is a real play. The song used, however, is an original song made for the episode. The writers of the show have also admitted that they were fans of ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer''. Using Shadowcat as the catalyst, the two shows appear similar: a teenage girl with superpowers fights powerful villains in order to save her high school.<ref name="beyondevo"/> ''Buffy'' creator [[Joss Whedon]] has openly credited Kitty Pryde as an inspiration for the character of [[Buffy Summers]].<ref>[http://www.ugo.com/channels/comics/features/josswhedon/default.asp Joss Whedon Talks X-Men, Firefly Movie] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709071018/http://www.ugo.com/channels/comics/features/josswhedon/default.asp |date=July 9, 2011 }}</ref>
===Other villains===
[[Image:Apocevo.png|325px|Apocalypse's two incarnations in ''X-Men: Evolution''.|thumb]]
*[[Apocalypse (comics)|Apocalypse]], voiced by David Kaye, differed greatly from the original version; most notably, his initial appearances showed him as an irridescent god-like being who never spoke. During the series finale, he was altered to more closely resemble his original appearance, becoming a blue cyborg with a penchant for overly [[histrionic]] dialogue. It is believed this was due to pressure from fans of the original Apocalypse.
*[[Mesmero]], voiced by [[Ron Halder]], was little more than a servant of Apocalypse in X-Men: Evolution. While Apocalypse was sealed away in the Himalayas, Mesmero helped track down the items that would help free him. He traveled with a circus (it is implied that he worked there before his time with Apocalypse, as he is found there once Apocalypse discards him) and used his hypnotic powers to recruit the X-Men (and later, Rogue alone) to help free Apocalypse. In contrast to his comic counterpart, this Mesmero looks like a normal human with strange green tattoos, rather than a green skintone.
*[[Juggernaut (comics)|Juggernaut]] (Cain Marko), voiced by [[Paul Dobson]]. In Juggarnaut's first appearance on the show, it took the combined forces of the X-Men & Brotherhood to stop him from harming Xavier & Mystique. Albeit, in his second appearance, a substantially more experienced X-Men team managed to defeat Juggernaut.
*[[Legion (Marvel Comics)|Legion]] (David Haller/Lucas) was altered slightly from the comics. He more closely resembled his father, Professor X, and had inherited his psionic powers, but here, Legion was also able to shape-shift between his various personalities. The dominant personality, Lucas, is a Scottish goth-type who has no basis in the comics. While originally, Legion's personalities developed due to mental disorders, in Evolution, they are manifestations of repressed feelings. Whereas David Haller is disappointed in his father's absence, Lucas demonstrates this disappointment through anger and violence.
*[[Bolivar Trask]], voiced by [[John Novak]].
*[[Sentinels (comics)|The Sentinel]] only appeared twice in the series: the first time as a single prototype that was unleashed in New York, and the second time as several units in S.H.I.E.L.D.'s first line of defense against Apocalypse.
*[[Robert Kelly (comics)|Edward Kelly]], voiced by [[Dale Wilson]]. In X-Men: Evolution, he was the second principal of Bayville High (the first, Ms. Darkholme, had vanished) and carried suspicions about the mutant teens which became full-blown prejudice when they were publicly revealed. Later, he ran for mayor of Bayville, competing with the falsely heroic Brotherhood for media attention.
*[[Duncan Matthews]], voiced by [[Vincent Gale]]. A stereotypical jock/football player. In his earliest appearances, he was little more than the local high school jerk before becoming a rival to Cyclops for the attention of Jean Grey. By the end of the series, he and his buddies began terrorizing innocent mutants, drawing the wrath of Spyke and the Morlocks.
*[[Houngan]]-Witch-Doctor Storm's tribe.He is jealous of Storm because her powers over climate made her a more venerable idol in the village,he comess to America to seek revenge and is able to drain Storm's powers. It is unclear if he is a mutant, relies on magic, or a combination of the two.
 
Starting with the first episode of Season 4, "Impact", the episode title was no longer aired on-screen at the beginning of the show, and ''X-Men: Evolution'' became the third longest-running Marvel cartoon, behind ''[[Spider-Man (1994 TV series)|Spider-Man]]'' (5 seasons, 65 episodes) and ''[[X-Men: The Animated Series]]'' (5 seasons, 76 episodes). [[Boyd Kirkland]], the show's producer, says his favorite ''X-Men: Evolution'' season is Season 3.<ref name="animationage"/> The monthly budget for ''X-Men: Evolution'' was $350,000.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}}
==Miscellaneous characters==
*[[Amanda Sefton]], another schoolmate of Kurt Wagner. Her comic book incarnation is that of an airline stewardess and gypsy sorceress. It was never directly touched on if her Evolution incarnation was similarily inclined, but she seemed to have put the pieces together about Kurt not being all that he appeared to be.
*[[Arcade (comics)|Arcade]], aka Webber Tork, a freshman computer whiz. Mystique, posing as a girl called Risty Wilde, gets him to hack into Cerebro and while he thinks it's some high-tech game, she steals data about Scarlet Witch. In the cartoon, Arcade is apparantly not a villain, but just a regular student.
*''Paul'' is a blond schoolmate of Scott Summers and was one of his good acquaintances. He made several appearances in the series, the last a look of utter bewilderment when the X-Men were outed on TV.
*''Taryn Fujioka'' is a black-haired, attractive girl who houses a crush on Scott. At first, she is Jean's best friend, but when Jean starts to develop feelings for Scott herself, becomes her most bitter rival. However, when Scott was outed as a mutant, she shunned him.
*[[Captain America]] and [[Nick Fury]] also make an appearance in the series.
 
This is the first ''X-Men'' animated series to use [[digital ink and paint]].
==Episode list==
 
Produced in the United States, the voice recording was done in Canada and the show was animated in Japan and South Korea. Most of the animation was outsourced to [[Madhouse (company)|Madhouse]], [[Mook Animation]] in Japan, [[DR Movie]], and WHITE LINE in South Korea.
{{spoilers}}
 
While no official statement has come down on why the show ended after season 4, the show's co-producer, Robert N. Skir, has stated that it most likely came down to WB wanting show changes as well as business strategy moves with Nickelodeon in 2003.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bobulinksi |first1=Andrew |last2=Blake |first2=Kinsey |title=An Interview with Robert N. Skir |url=https://conventionalrelations.net/2020/11/11/an-interview-with-robert-n-skir/ |website=conventionalrelations.net |date=November 11, 2020 |access-date=20 April 2024}}</ref>
===Season One===
 
==Successors==
{| class="wikitable"
The show gave birth to a new series, ''[[Wolverine and the X-Men (TV series)|Wolverine and the X-Men]]'', which premiered on January 23, 2009 and lasted for only one season when it was cancelled on November 29, 2009. Although was not a continuation of ''X-Men: Evolution'', the same creative team was behind the show: Craig Kyle, Chris Yost, Steven E. Gordon, Greg Johnson and Boyd Kirkland all returned to work on the series.
!colspan="6"| XME: Season 1
|-
! Episode
! Name
! Description
|-
| valign="top" | 1
| align="center" | Strategy X
| valign="top" | General introduction of the main cast; first Nightcrawler and Toad
|-
| valign="top" | 2
| align="center" | The X-Impulse
| valign="top" | Introduction of Shadowcat and Avalanche.
|-
| valign="top" | 3
| align="center" | Rogue Recruit
| valign="top" | Introduction of Rogue. Mystique fools her into believing that the X-Men hunt her down.
|-
| valign="top" | 4
| align="center" | Mutant Crush
| valign="top" | Introduction of Blob. Blob crushes on Jean and abducts her, but Rogue saves her.
|-
| valign="top" | 5
| align="center" | Speed And Spyke
| valign="top" | Introduction of Spyke and Quicksilver.
|-
| valign="top" | 6
| align="center" | Middleverse
| valign="top" | Nightcrawler clashes with Cyclops and accidentally activates a device which transfers him to a parallel dimension. Introduction of Forge.
|-
| valign="top" | 7
| align="center" | Turn Of The Rogue
| valign="top" | Rogue and Cyclops join an excursion, set up by Mystique to kill Cyclops. First hints that Rogue is crushing on Scott. Rogue finds out the truth about Mystique, saves him and joins the X-Men.
|-
| valign="top" | 8
| align="center" | Spykecam
| valign="top" | Spyke films an ordinary day in life. Rogue and Shadowcat argue about a Dracula play at school. Introduction of Sabretooth.
|-
| valign="top" | 9
| align="center" | Survival Of The Fittest
| valign="top" | The X-Men and the Brotherhood battle each other in a summer camp, but must cooperate against a bigger threat. Introduction of Juggernaut.
|-
| valign="top" | 10
| align="center" | Shadowed Past
| valign="top" | Rogue has nightmares about Kurt being abducted. It turns out that she absorbed Mystique's memories, and the X-Men find out that Mystique is his mother. Wolverine also discovers that Kurt was the object of heinous experiments by Magneto, but decides not to tell him.
|-
| valign="top" | 11
| align="center" | Grim Reminder
| valign="top" | Wolverine is tortured by nightmares. He goes into the wilderness and stumbles upon Sabretooth and [[Weapon X]], and is brainwashed. Shadowcat and Nightcrawler have to save the day.
|-
| valign="top" | 12 and 13
| align="center" | The Cauldron (Part 1 and 2)
| valign="top" | Magneto holds a tournament to find out which mutants are "worthy" of joining him on Asteroid M. The "winners" are abducted by force and offered a place in the Cauldron, in which mutant powers are increased to "their full level". Introduction of Havok.
|}
 
In 2012, Jean Grey and Robert Kelly made guest appearances in the ''[[Iron Man: Armored Adventures]]'' episode "The X-Factor", with [[Venus Terzo]] and [[Dale Wilson (actor)|Dale Wilson]] reprising their roles from ''X-Men: Evolution''.
===Season Two===
 
{| class="wikitable"
==Reception==
!colspan="6"| XME: Season 2
According to [[IGN]], the show aired "much to X-fans' initial protests and lamentations."<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://ca.ign.com/articles/2011/05/31/the-x-mens-tv-history?page=2|title = The X-Men's TV History|date = May 31, 2011|access-date = June 14, 2014|website = IGN|publisher = IGN Entertainment, Inc}}</ref> [[RPGnet]] enjoyed ''Evolution''<nowiki/>'s second season, hailing it as the show's "transition season." An improvement over the show's first season "in every way," ''X-Men: Evolution'', according to RPGnet, "introduc[ed] many ... re-imagined characters from X-Men lore that will certainly entertain the X-Men fans," specifically Beast and Principal Kelley. RPGnet wrote, "Some episodes could easily be cut out of the show and they would not be missed," describing the dialogue as "atrocious at times" and some of the characters as "very one dimensional."<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://www.rpg.net/reviews/archive/12/12924.phtml|title = Review of X-Men: Evolution Season Two|access-date = June 12, 2014|website = RPGnet|publisher = Skotos Tech, Inc}}</ref> Positively, Fred Choi of ''[[The Tech (newspaper)|The Tech]]'' hailed ''X-Men: Evolution'' as "the best incarnation of X-Men yet," admitting that "There are a few changes which will send [[wikt:purist|purist]]s howling in the streets." Choi acknowledged that "The students generally have abilities more powerful than they ever had in the comics," specifically mentioning intangible Shadowcat and telekinetic Jean Grey. While praising the show's animation and music – "cleaner than the original series" – Choi described the transformation of Rogue "into a reclusive goth chick" as " completely baffling but surprisingly palatable."<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://tech.mit.edu/V122/N48/X-men.48a.html|title = X-Men: Evolution, Third Season|date = October 18, 2002|access-date = June 14, 2014|website = The Tech|last = Choi|first = Fred|archive-date = January 5, 2016|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160105215215/http://tech.mit.edu/V122/N48/X-men.48a.html|url-status = dead}}</ref>
|-
 
! Episode
Noting the show's treatment of its characters, specifically making them high school teenagers for thematic purposes as "admirable," John G. Nettles of [[PopMatters]] concluded, "What disappoints, however, is the sheer number of missed opportunities here and the decision to subscribe to the same old social norms."<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://www.popmatters.com/review/xmen-evolution/|title = X-Men: Evolution|access-date = June 12, 2014|website = PopMatters|publisher = PopMatters Media, Inc|last = John G.|first = Nettles}}</ref> Reviewing ''X-Men: Evolution''<nowiki/>'s third season, Filip Vukcevic of [[IGN]] was mixed in his analysis, deeming it inferior to ''X-Men: The Animated Series ''and concluding, "''Evolution ... ''will interest long-time X-fans, but the fluffy stories and underutilized character personalities ... will cause discerning viewers to zone out," suffering from its attempt "to cram everyone in." Additionally, the author felt that ''Evolution ''lacks the "visual flair" of ''The Batman'' and the "wit" of ''Teen Titans''. The author also panned the series' "average" voice acting, feeling that Magneto, Wolverine and Beast were "miscast." He also noted that combined with "inventive gags," "the show does its best to make the most of the mutants' powers" because "The fight scenes are fun to watch if only to see how the characters interact."<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://www.ign.com/articles/2006/06/09/x-men-evolution-the-complete-third-season|title = X-Men: Evolution - The Complete Third Season|date = June 9, 2006|access-date = June 12, 2014|website = IGN|publisher = [[News Corporation (1980–2013)|News Corporation]]|last = Vukcevic|first = Filip}}</ref>
! Name
 
! Description
==Awards and nominations==
|-
''X-Men: Evolution'' won the award for ''Outstanding Sound Mixing – Special Class'' at the [[28th Daytime Emmy Awards]], on May 18, 2001<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=234 |title='Batman Beyond,' 'X-Men: Evolution' win Daytime Emmys |first=Beau |last=Yarbrough |date=May 21, 2001 |work=[[Comic Book Resources]] |access-date=June 8, 2011}}</ref> and won the award for ''Outstanding Sound Editing – Live Action and Animation'' at the [[30th Daytime Emmy Awards]], on May 16, 2003.<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0247827/awards IMDb.com: "X-Men: Evolution" (2000) – Awards]</ref>
| valign="top" | 14
 
| align="center" | Growing Pains
It also won the ''Cover of the Year Award'' in 2004 for best animated figure for Beast. It was nominated for several [[Motion Picture Sound Editors|Golden Reel Awards]], as well as other Emmys. [[Steven E. Gordon]], the director of this show, was nominated in the ''Production Design in an Animated Television Production'' category for ''X-Men: Evolution'' at the 2001 [[Annie Award]]s.
| valign="top" | The Brotherhood (sans Mystique) gatecrash a soccer match of Jean's team and threaten to expose mutantkind to the world. Introduction of the New Mutants.
|-
| valign="top" | 15
| align="center" | Power Surge
| valign="top" | Jean Grey loses control of her powers, and the only one able to contain her is Rogue.
|-
| valign="top" | 16
| align="center" | Bada-Bing Bada-Boom
| valign="top" | Boom Boom flirts with Nightcrawler, and then gets a visit from her criminal father who wants her to commit a crime for him. Tabitha reluctantly agrees, but then crosses the way of the Brotherhood.
|-
| valign="top" | 17
| align="center" | Fun and Games
| valign="top" | While Professor X has to mend Juggernaut's stasis cell, the younger X-Men trick Cyclops and Jean Grey to exit the Mansion in order to have a party. However, there is a guest with sinister intentions. Introduction of Arcade.
|-
| valign="top" | 18
| align="center" | Beast of Bayville
| valign="top" | Dr. Hank McCoy has no energy left to fight his mutation, which forces him to be a violent Beast. When he finally becomes a monster, Spyke is the only one who can possibly reach Dr. McCoy.
|-
| valign="top" | 19
| align="center" | Adrift
| valign="top" | When Cyclops and Havok are on a boat tour, a great storm comes and nearly kills them.
|-
| valign="top" | 20
| align="center" | On Angel's Wings
| valign="top" | In Christmas time, a mysterious angel is saving people's lives. Rogue and Cyclops track down Warren Worthington, who is deeply unsure about his mutation. Magneto wants to frame him, in order to instill hate against mankind into him, and the two X-Men have to set things straight. Introduction of Angel.
|-
| valign="top" | 21
| align="center" | African Storm
| valign="top" | Storm is tormented by Houngan, an evil African shamen who wants to take over Africa. Storm and the X-Men have to stop an enemy that knows every weakness of hers.
|-
| valign="top" | 22
| align="center" | Joyride
| valign="top" | Lance Alvers, aka Avalanche, wants to join the X-Men. He causes a lot of ruckus, but also pleasure with his rough-and-tumble attitude.
|-
| valign="top" | 23
| align="center" | Walk on the Wildside
| valign="top" | The female X-Men are fed up of playing second fiddle, and form a vigilante crime-fighting group. For a while, things go great, but in the end, an old enemy crosses their way.
|-
| valign="top" | 24
| align="center" | Operation: Rebirth
| valign="top" | Wolverine and Nightcrawler track down Magneto, who building a rejuvenation machine which will restore his energy. It is the same machine that gave Captain America his powers, but which later threatened to kill him. Being a mutant, Magneto is resistant to these sideeffects. When Kurt has the chance to destroy the machine (and to eliminate Magneto), he hesistates. A rejuvenated Magneto spares both Kurt and Logan, stating that both saved his life. A sideplot reveals the shared history of Logan and Erik: when Erik was a child, Logan and Captain America saved him out of a concentration camp in World War II. The last scene shows Logan standing before Cap's frozen body in SHIELD.
|-
| valign="top" | 25
| align="center" | Mindbender
| valign="top" | A mysterious hypnotiseur named Mesmero has kidnapped Jean and brainwashed her into committing crimes for him.
|-
| valign="top" | 26
| align="center" | Shadow Dance
| valign="top" | The Bayville High dance arrives, and everybody is scrambling for dates. Jean is highly jealous of Scott's date. In the meanwhile, Forge constructs a device which augments Nightcrawler's teleportation, but is unaware that monsters from Kurt's bamf dimension enter Earth. Introduction of Amanda Sefton.
|-
| valign="top" | 27
| align="center" | Retreat
| valign="top" | In order to help a depressive Beast out of his slump, Kitty arranges a field trip with the New Mutants. Hunters catch Beast, and the young mutants must save their teacher from life in captivity.
|-
| valign="top" | 28
| align="center" | The Hex Factor
| valign="top" | A mentally unstable, but immensly powerful mutant called Wanda is abducted from a mental institution and becomes the newest Brotherhood member, much to the horror of her brother Pietro. The new Brotherhood defeats the X-Men. Introduction of Scarlet Witch.
|-
| valign="top" | 29 and 30
| align="center" | Day of Reckoning (Part 1 and 2)
| valign="top" | Anti-mutant racist Bolivar Trask abducts Wolverine and introduces him to his newest invention, the Sentinels. In the meanwhile, Magneto wants to provoke all-out war between mankind and mutantkind and summons his Acolytes to create mayhem. The X-Men are shocked when Professor X teams them up with the Brotherhood to stop them, but then, a shocking twist reveals that nothing was to be as it seemed to be. Introduction of the Acolytes and Bolivar Trask.
|-
|}
 
===Season Three=Analysis==
===Comparison with original comics===
The ''X-Men: Evolution'' series was targeted at a younger audience and as such portrays the majority of characters as adolescents rather than adults like in ''X-Men: The Animated Series''.<ref name="Ten years tough for X-Men"/> In the series, like many animated series based on comics, completely new characters were introduced including [[Spyke]].<ref>{{cite news|title= The X-teens|newspaper= [[Sun-Sentinel]]|publisher=[[Tronc|Tribune Publishing]]|url= http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2000-12-10/entertainment/0012080789_1_ultimate-x-men-diamond-comics-distributors-superheroes/2|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120524102140/http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2000-12-10/entertainment/0012080789_1_ultimate-x-men-diamond-comics-distributors-superheroes/2|url-status= dead|archive-date= May 24, 2012|access-date=October 23, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=The History of Wolverine and the X-Men on TV|website=[[IGN]]|publisher=Ziff Davis|url=http://uk.tv.ign.com/articles/709/709943p3.html|access-date=October 23, 2010}}</ref> As much of the cast were teenagers, they are shown regularly attending high school in addition to the Xavier's Institute. At the latter, Professor X, Storm, Wolverine and later Beast also acted as their teachers at the institute. Beast also served as a chemistry teacher to the cast at high school prior to his transformation.
 
''X-Men: Evolution'' is set in a fictionalized version of the real life village of [[Bayville, New York]], the state established in the episode "The Beast of Bayville", where Kitty Pryde receives a package from her parents addressed to Bayville, New York. Furthermore, in the early part of the series (until the end of season 2) most people are unaware of the existence of mutants. Also, the "Brotherhood" team is not known as the "Brotherhood of Evil Mutants" within the context of this series. They are not a team of [[terrorists]] or mutant supremacists. Instead, the Brotherhood is made up of misfit mutants and [[juvenile delinquents]] who often oppose the X-Men (in physical, social and philosophical realms).
 
The series was created as a stark contrast to ''X-Men: The Animated Series''. The series' [[Bible (screenwriting)|bible]] was written by [[Robert N. Skir]] and Marty Isenberg (albeit uncredited), who meant to take The X-Men back to their roots as high school students learning to control their superpowers, as when the comics termed them "The Strangest Teens of All".{{Citation needed|date=October 2008}} Whereas the Fox series reflected the then-current role of X-Men as freedom fighters battling persecution and bigotry against mutantkind, ''X-Men: Evolution'' used the theme of mutant powers as a metaphor for the struggles of adolescence.<ref name="Ten years tough for X-Men"/>
 
The look of the series was designed by Producer [[Boyd Kirkland]] and artist [[Frank Paur]], who created new costumes for the X-Men, replacing the comics-faithful designs of ''X-Men: The Animated Series'' with [[anime]]-influenced costumes which were much more animation-friendly.
 
The first season mainly concerned the characters' conflict with Magneto's Brotherhood of Mutants as well as served as an introductory to many of the characters to allow people to get used to these new teenage versions. Later seasons predominantly featured Apocalypse as an adversary, introduced versions of the [[New Mutants]], [[Morlocks (comics)|Morlocks]] and Magneto's Acolytes as well as posed the U.S. Government as an adversary to all parties.
 
The series revealed a detailed knowledge of canon history in a number of small ways. Examples include the evolution of [[Cerebro]] from a console device, Shadowcat's initial uneasiness around Nightcrawler and [[Forge (character)|Forge]]'s scientific arrogance along with his devices causing [[unintended consequence]]s. Rogue is shown to absorb Cyclops' powers in the correct manner. In the Fox series, she also absorbed his lack of control over his beams (which was a result of a brain injury, not inherent in his powers). ''X-Men: Evolution'' shows her with full control over them, just as Scott would if he had not sustained a brain injury. In "Survival of the Fittest", Xavier says that Juggernaut acquired his powers through mysticism (but unlike the comic, says that it unlocked a latent mutant power), and in "The Cauldron" Magneto develops his mutant-enhancing technology from that same Jewel of Cyttorak (but says that he has found it to be scientific rather than mystical). In "Day of Recovery", [[Toad (Marvel Comics)|Toad]] is seen to be quite comfortable with technology and in "Operation Rebirth", the [[Prisoner of war|POW]] camp Magneto is held in as a child is visually similar (in the opening shot) to [[Auschwitz]], though it is not identified as such.
 
In addition, [[Beast (Marvel Comics)|Beast]]'s origin is almost identical to that of the comic, despite the change in profession and setting. [[Mesmero]] is shown as part of a circus troupe, much like his appearance in the "Phoenix Saga". Aside from this, supporting characters like Bolivar Trask, [[Nick Fury]], [[Captain America]], [[Destiny (Irene Adler)|Destiny]], [[Agatha Harkness]], and [[Amanda Sefton]] were all taken from the X-Men comic, usually serving to homage to originals without necessarily staying completely faithful to their form.
 
Another difference between the comic and the show is the name changes. Toad, originally Mortimer Toynbee, is changed to Todd Tolansky who has a [[New York accent]], and Avalanche, originally Dominic Petros, is changed to Lance Alvers. Both changed names are a play on their codenames. Also, their nationalities were changed to American from, respectively, British and Greek.
 
===Evolution characters in the comics and films===
[[X-23]], an original character introduced in later seasons,<ref name="episode X-23"/> made her comic book debut in the miniseries ''[[NYX (comics)|NYX]]'',<ref name="Unlimited Highlights: X-23"/> where her appearance was slightly altered to more closely resemble Wolverine. She received a self-titled comic miniseries in 2005.<ref name="Unlimited Highlights: X-23"/><ref name="X-23 #1"/> Much like [[Harley Quinn]] of ''[[Batman: The Animated Series]]'', [[Terry McGinnis]] of ''[[Batman Beyond]]'', [[Cinderblock (character)|Cinderblock]] of ''[[Teen Titans (TV series)|Teen Titans]]'', or Marvel's own [[Firestar (Marvel Comics)|Firestar]] of ''[[Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends]]'', she was a character originally created for an animated series that was incorporated into comic book [[Canon (fiction)|canon]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Marjorie Liu brings humanity to the tortured teen of 'X-23' |first=Brian |last=Truitt |url=https://usatoday30.usatoday.com/life/comics/2010-09-15-x23-ST_N.htm |newspaper=[[USA Today]]|publisher=[[Gannett Company]]|date=September 15, 2010 |access-date=June 8, 2011}}</ref> The character of Dr. [[Deborah Risman]] which created X-23, the clone of Wolverine,<ref name="episode X-23">{{Cite episode |title=X-23 |episode-link=List of X-Men: Evolution_episodes#Season three |series=X-Men: Evolution |credits=Curt Geda (d), Craig Kyle (w) and Chris Yost (w) |network=[[Kids' WB]] |airdate=August 2, 2003 |season=3 |number=11 }}</ref> was also created for the show and was replaced with a similar character named Dr. Sarah Kinney in the miniseries ''X-23''.<ref name="Unlimited Highlights: X-23">{{cite web |url=http://marvel.com/news/story/13696/unlimited_highlights_x-23 |title=Unlimited Highlights: X-23 |author=Ben Chabala |date=August 19, 2010 |work=[[Marvel.com]] |access-date=June 7, 2011}}</ref><ref name="X-23 #1">[[Chris Yost]] (w), Jonathan Sibal (i), ''[[X-23]]'' No. 1 (January 12, 2005), [[Marvel Comics]]</ref> She later made appearances in the television series ''[[Wolverine and the X-Men (TV series)|Wolverine and the X-Men]]'', and in the films ''[[Logan (film)|Logan]]'' and ''[[Deadpool & Wolverine]]'', portrayed by [[Dafne Keen]].
 
The comic book ''[[X-Statix]]'' featured an African-American mutant with the same codename and abilities as Spyke; however, this version of Spyke was not related to Storm, had a very different personality (modeled after popular [[gangsta rap]]pers), and is a completely separate character. Another similar character appeared in ''[[X-Men: The Last Stand]]'', but as a member of the Brotherhood of Mutants. He is listed as Spike in the credits, but is not mentioned by name in the film, and has no dialogue. When Wolverine invades the forest base of the Brotherhood, Spike is one of the characters that attacks him, demonstrating abilities identical to those shown by the Spyke character before he lost control of his mutation. Another similar character, who bears a greater resemblance to Spyke appears in ''[[X-Men: Days of Future Past]]'', but again, he is not named. In the canon, Storm has a teenaged cousin, not a nephew, named David Evans, but he is apparently too young to display any mutant abilities.
 
===Marvel references and cameos===
''X-Men: Evolution'' weaves many references and cameos into its show. One of the masks worn by the vandals in the Season 3 episode "Mainstream", bears a suitable resemblance to the classic Marvel Comics monster, [[Fin Fang Foom]]. In the Season 3 episode "Under Lock and Key", circumstances gather a mix of X-Men, junior members, and nonmembers into a mission team that matches the original X-Men team (Cyclops, Jean Grey, Beast, Iceman, and Angel)—Iceman mentions that this is "definitely the cool team."{{Citation needed|date=May 2016}} In the Season 3 episode "Dark Horizon", Kitty is seen sleeping with a stuffed purple dragon, a reference to [[Lockheed (character)|Lockheed]], her purple dragon companion. Also in "Dark Horizon", Nightcrawler, Colossus, and Shadowcat are grouped together when the X-Men and the Acolytes are separated, a reference to the Europe-based superhero team [[Excalibur (comics)|Excalibur]] which included all three mutants in its roster.{{Citation needed|date=May 2016}}
 
[[Captain America]] is the only non-mutant Marvel superhero to appear on ''Evolution''. There is also, however, a small [[Iron Man]] reference in the episode "On Angel's Wings", when a sign reading "[[Stark Enterprises]]" is seen during an exterior shot of New York City and a small [[Spider-Man]] reference when Angel is shown reading the ''[[Daily Bugle]]'', the newspaper that [[Peter Parker]]/Spider-Man normally takes pictures for. In addition, [[Omega Red]] mentions [[David North (character)|Maverick]] and [[Kestrel (Marvel Comics)|Kestrel]] in the episode "Target X", referring to the latter as "Wraith". In "Dark Horizon", the hieroglyphics translated by Beast refer to [[Rama-Tut]], one identity of [[Kang the Conqueror]].
 
==Home media release==
===iTunes===
All four seasons are available for download in SD format on [[iTunes]] (Only available for America), being released in 2009 by Marvel. All 4 seasons immediately broke into the Top 10 Animation charts on iTunes, with season 4 peaking at #3.
 
===DVD===
{| class="wikitable"
!colspan="6"| XME: Season 3
|-
!rowspan="2"|Name
! Episode
!colspan="3"|Release dates
! Name
!rowspan="2"|Ep&nbsp;#
! Description
!rowspan="2"|Additional information
|-
!Region 1
| valign="top" | 31
!Region 2
| align="center" | Day Of Recovery
!Region 4
| valign="top" | The remaining X-Men and Brotherhood members go to [[Area 51]] to save their captive members. However, when Cyclops traps treacherous Mystique in Area 51 to blackmail her into saying where Professor X is, the squads split. The X-Men face a world alone which shuns them.
|-
|UnXpected Changes
| valign="top" | 32
|September 23, 2003
| align="center" | The Stuff Of Heroes
|TBA
| valign="top" | Storm and Beast step in front of the Senate and try to curb rampant anti-mutant racism. The X-Men fight have to stop Juggernaut, who was unleashed by Mystique and is threatening to destroy a dam.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|3
|Season one, volume one
|-
|Xplosive Days
| valign="top" | 33
|September 23, 2003
| align="center" | Mainstream
|TBA
| valign="top" | The outed X-Men return to Bayville High and are scorned and verbally abused. The Senate decides whether to pass anti-mutant laws, causing the Brotherhood to attack. The X-Men fight them off, and the Senate decides to stay neutral.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|3
|Season one, volume two
|-
|X Marks the Spot
| valign="top" | 34
|September 23, 2003
| align="center" |The Stuff Of Villains
|TBA
| valign="top" | Wanda wants to find out where her father Magneto is and threatens Caliban and then her brother Quicksilver for info. When he refuses, Wanda delivers him to the police. When the Brotherhood wants to break him out of a prison transport, Rogue and Shadowcat appear and prevent Pietro from falling to his death. However, he is less then grateful and with help of Gambit, becomes new leader of the Brotherhood.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|3
|Season one, volume three
|-
|Xposing the Truth
| valign="top" | 35
|September 23, 2003
| align="center" |Blind Alley
|TBA
| valign="top" | Jean confesses that she loves Scott. However, Mystique abducts Cyclops to a desert in [[Mexico]] and steals his ruby quartz glasses. Jean tracks him him down, but followed by Mystique who wants to kill them both.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|4
|Season one, volume four
|-
|Mutants Rising
| valign="top" | 36
|February 10, 2004
| align="center" | X-Treme Measures
|TBA
| valign="top" | Spyke joins a skateboarding contest sponsored by "Power8" soda. However, Power8 is harmful to mutants, and when Spyke drinks a swig, his mutation advances and poisons and disfigures him seriously. He is saved by the Morlocks, and in the end, Spyke joins them.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|4
|Season two, volume one
|-
|Powers Revealed
| valign="top" | 37
|February 10, 2004
| align="center" | The Toad, The Witch And The Wardrobe
|TBA
| valign="top" | Wanda tracks down Magneto to his Acolyte HQ in the [[Alps]], near the cottage where Kurt is spending holiday with Amanda Sefton. Toad steals Nightcrawler's image inducer and pursues his love, followed by an angry Kurt. However, when Wanda gets abducted by the Acolytes, the two rescue Wanda... who has been brainwashed by Mastermind into believing Magneto loved her.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|4
|Season two, volume two
|-
|Enemies Unveiled
| valign="top" | 38
|June 29, 2004
| align="center" | Self Possessed
|TBA
| valign="top" | Rogue witnesses her crush Scott date Jean. She is consoled by her friend Risty, but when she accidentally touches and absorbs her, she finds out that she was Mystique in disguise. Thinking everybody hates her, Rogue's latent [[multiple personality disorder]] breaks through and she loses her sanity. The X-Men have to stop their colleague, who has all their powers combined and in the verge of burning herself out.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|4
|Season two, volume three
|-
|Mystique's Revenge
| valign="top" | 39
|November 23, 2004
| align="center" | Under Lock and Key
|TBA
| valign="top" | Angel spots Gambit stealing a mysterious artifact, but when he wants to stop them, [[Mesmero]] fights him off. When the Acolytes want to steal another artifact, the X-Men fight them and dsicover that there is a bigger plan happening...
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|5
|Season two, volume four
|-
|The Complete Third Season
| valign="top" | 40
|May 23, 2006
| align="center" | Cruise Control
|TBA
| valign="top" | Taking a break from superhero duty, the X-Men (sans Rogue) take a pleasure cruise. However, Magma becomes violently ill, literally suffering from earth withdrawal. When Boom-Boom transfers her to an island, she accidentally triggers a volcano. When the volcano threatens to explode again, Magma dives into its heart to silence it once and for all.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|13
|
|-
|The Complete Fourth Season
| valign="top" | 41
|TBA
| align="center" | X-23
|TBA
| valign="top" | A mysterious assassin terrorizes the X-Mansion, knocking out the X-Men one by one. Wolverine finds out that it is his clone, raised without love by [[HYDRA]], and she wants to kill him because she makes him responsible for her miserable life. Wolverine and X-23, as she is called, square off in a battle which Wolverine does not want to win.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|9
|
|-
|The Complete Animated Series
| valign="top" | 42 and 43
|TBA
| align="center" | Dark Horizon (Part 1 and 2)
|TBA
| valign="top" | Rogue falls under mind control of [[Mesmero]] and is used as a weapon to absorb the mutant powers of every X-Man, Brotherhood and Acolyte member. The three factions reluctantly cooperate and find out that Mesmero wants Rogue to give all her powers to Lord Apocalypse to awaken him. The reluctant team tracks him down to Egypt, but cannot prevent that Apocalypse comes back to life. Mankind is in great danger of extinction.
|TBA
| style="text-align:center;"|52
|
|}
 
===SeasonStreaming Fourservices===
* '''Disney+''' - All four seasons are currently available as of May 2024 in the United States only.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Watch X-Men: Evolution {{!}} Full episodes {{!}} Disney+ |url=https://www.disneyplus.com/en-us/series/x-men-evolution/6hdQOcPT2QeV |access-date=2022-09-19 |website=www.disneyplus.com |language=en-gb}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=X-Men: Evolution {{!}} Where to Stream and Watch |url=https://decider.com/show/x-men-evolution/ |access-date=2022-09-19 |website=[[Decider (website)|Decider]] |date=December 22, 2020 |language=en-US}}</ref>
* '''Netflix''' - The series is not available on [[Netflix]], though the DVDs were available as part of their now defunct DVD by mail service.
* '''YouTube''' - All four seasons were uploaded on [[YouTube]], however [[Marvel Entertainment]]'s YouTube channel listed them as private.
* '''Google Play''' - All four seasons are currently available on [[Google Play]], although the show is inaccessible in some countries, such as Poland.
* '''Hulu''' - Hulu had all episodes available on streaming as early as 2009. However, it is no longer available.<ref name=":0" />
* '''Amazon''' - All four seasons are currently available on [[Amazon Instant Video]].<ref name=":0" />
* '''iTunes''' - All four seasons are currently available for purchase on the [[iTunes Store]].
* '''HBO Max''' - All four seasons are currently available in HD on streaming in Latin America since September 17, 2022.<ref>{{Cite tweet |url=https://twitter.com/hbomaxbr/status/1571106708545339392 |number=1571106708545339392 |access-date=2023-03-07 |title=SCOOOOOOOTTT!!! |user=HBOMaxBR |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite tweet |url=https://twitter.com/hbomaxla/status/1565392064111599616 |number=1565392064111599616 |access-date=2023-03-07 |title=Al diablo el zodiaco, dime tu canción favorita de #Elvis 😍 |user=HBOMaxLA |language=en}}</ref>
 
==Merchandise==
{| class="wikitable"
===Comic books===
!colspan="6"| XME: Season 4
In January 2002, [[Marvel Comics]] began publishing an ''X-Men: Evolution'' comic book, partially based on the show. Written by [[Devin K. Grayson]] with art by [[Studio XD]], it was abruptly canceled after the ninth issue due to low sales. The series has been reprinted in two [[Trade paperback (comics)|trade paperback]]s.<ref>{{cite book |title=Marvel graphic novels and related publications: an annotated guide to comics, prose novels, children's books, articles, criticism and reference works, 1965–2005 |last=Weiner |first=Robert G.|year=2008 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-7864-2500-6 |pages=<!--227–229-->385 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=npIsZV7grboC&pg=PA115 |access-date=June 8, 2011}}</ref>
|-
! Episode
! Name
! Description
|-
| valign="top" | 44
| align="center" | Impact
| valign="top" | Strange phenomenon occur in the wake of Apocalypse. In the meanwhile, Nightcrawler pleas to Agatha Harkness to revive his mother Mystique, who is still turned into stone. Agatha states that a touch of Rogue will break the spell, but instead of saving her foster mother, Rogue pushes her over a cliff and smashes her.
|-
| valign="top" | 45
| align="center" | No Good Deed
| valign="top" | In order to boost their reputation, the Brotherhood decide to stage accidents and then rescue the bystanders. In the beginning, they are successful, but then, a staged accident runs out of hand. The X-Men just save the day, and the Brotherhood stops with their deeds.
|-
| valign="top" | 46
| align="center" | Target X
| valign="top" | X-23 returns and wants to hunt down the people who tortured her. Accompanied by a reluctant Wolverine, the two tackle HYDRA and its leader Viper and bring the terrorists down.
|-
| valign="top" | 47
| align="center" | Sins of the Son
| valign="top" | Charles Xavier's son David has been seemingly abducted. The X-Men track him down, and it turns out that he suffers from [[multiple personality disorder]], and that his dominant malicious personality, called Lucas, overwhelmed him. In the end, Lucas defeats the X-Men and breaks free.
|-
| valign="top" | 48
| align="center" | Uprising
| valign="top" | Spyke makes his return, having turned into an angry vigilante who protects the Morlocks. He is unafraid to go in public with his disfiguring mutation, causing panic in his environment. Duncan Matthews and his friends hunt him down, and stumble on a small boy called Leech. When the X-Men fight Duncan's gang (and try to stop Evan from causing more damage), Leech stops the battle with his powers and is "outed" as a mutant. Spyke realizes that his rage has destroyed Leech's chances for a normal life.
|-
| valign="top" | 49
| align="center" | Cajun Spice
| valign="top" | Gambit abducts Rogue, so that her powers can aid him in finding his abducted father. The mission is a success, but Rogue finds out that Gambit had some additional, deeply egotistical goals attached. In the end, she states that he did the right thing for the wrong reasons, and that she forgives him.
|-
| valign="top" | 50
| align="center" | Ghost of a Chance
| valign="top" | Shadowcat meets Dani Moonstar and quickly becomes friends with her. But suddenly, she wakes up and realizes that she seemingly dreamt everything up, but then, it seems that her dreams had a deep meaning. In the end, Nightcrawler and her find out what really happened and that Dani Moonstar is more than a piece of fiction.
|-
| valign="top" | 51 and 52
| align="center" | Ascension (Part 1 and 2)
| valign="top" | Apocalypse wants to take over the world. He has turned Magneto, Professor X, Storm and Mystique into his Four Horsemen and has covered the world with a network of energy pyramids. The X-Men, the Brotherhood and SHIELD join forces to save humanity.
|}
 
The comic introduced the ''Evolution'' version of the Morlocks before they appeared on the show, and their appearances and motivations were radically different in both versions. It also featured an appearance from [[Mimic (comics)|Mimic]], who never appeared on the series.
==News==
 
An ongoing plot line would have introduced the ''Evolution'' version of [[Mister Sinister]], but the comic was canceled before it could be resolved. However, the cover of the unreleased issue 10 does reveal his intended character design.
* It is rumored that X-Men:Evolution ' Library Binding' is going to be a combine of all X-Men:Evolution short-run comics 12 issues.
* X-Men: Evolution Apocalypse by Airmax was nominated for the 'Cover of the Year Award 2004', but unfortunately could not win it.
* Season 3 is set to be released on DVD around about the time of X3's release
* New product ' Library binding' ' Hard cover' is hitting the shelves at the end of this month by Spotlight productions.
 
===Action Trivia figurines===
[[Marvel Toys|Toy Biz]] created a line of [[action figure]]s. [[Taco Bell]] ran the first ''X-Men: Evolution'' themed promotion with its Kid's Meals.<ref>{{cite news |title=X-Men Dine at Taco Bell; 2001: No Big Odyssey |author=David Finnigan |url=http://www.allbusiness.com/marketing-advertising/branding-brand-development/4673722-1.html |newspaper=[[Brandweek]] |date=January 1, 2001 |access-date=June 8, 2011}}</ref> [[Burger King]] also ran a Kid's Meal promotion which included ''X-Men: Evolution'' toys. Each toy included a mini-disc with games, screen-savers, and a mini-comic related to the character. The lineup included Rogue, Mystique, Cyclops, Wolverine, Magneto, Quicksilver, Nightcrawler, and Toad.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=683 |title=Marvel and Burger King team up for X-Men Evolution promotion |author=Jonah Weiland |date=December 19, 2001 |work=[[Comic Book Resources]]|access-date=October 23, 2010}}</ref>
* In pre-production, Spyke was originally called "Armadillo".
* Early concept art sketches show the X-Men in classic gold-and-black garbs. In these drafts, Spyke wears [[cornrows]], Rogue's outfit exposes her midriff and Jean Grey's costume is the female version of Cyclops' costume. Both Jean Grey as well as Shadowcat wear face masks, and in addition, Kitty is also wearing an orange miniskirt and [[Doc Martens]] over her spandex in these sketches. Early Storm shows her wearing white rather than black. (Reference: Image Gallery at [http://x-men.toonzone.net])
 
==DVDsNotes==
{{Notelist}}
 
==References==
*( Season 1)
{{Reflist}}
**UnXpected Changes
**Xplosive Days
**X marks The Spot
**Xposing The Truth
 
*( Season 2)
**Mutant Rising
**Powers Revealed
**Enemies Unveiled
**Mystque's Revenge
 
==Facts==
 
* Was the third largest Marvel cartoon.
* Was once the top rated show at Kids WB.
* Won three awards, including two Emmy's and Beast got the award for 'Best Animated Figure' by Iron Cow.
* Largest superhero related DVD releases by WB.
* Featured the best animation in a non-3D cartoon.
* X-Men: Legends 2 featured a similar Colossus design to that of X-Men: Evolution.
* Director Steven E Gordon left after two seasons.
* Brought an evolution in restraunt toys through releasng the first ever mini-disc toys.
* Despite the fact that this show was targeted to children and had it's independent story line, fans still complained about the show not being loyal to the comics.
* It was cancelled due to poor toy line, and thus the show could not get a 5th season because of it.
* The voice cast and other team members of the show had the most fun doing work on this series.
* The DVD titles of the first season always included then letter 'X', but second season DVD releases didn't.
* Featured dance moves never so realisticly animated before.
* First ever realistic cat-walk ever presented in an animation work.
* In planning of Season 2, there was to be a teenage Colossus, but the directors moved on to other plans.
* Steven E Gordon considers this show to be his personal accomplishmnet and has a high regard for this show.
* Show had no other superheroes as ' guest stars' because Kirkland wanted to make this a hard evidence that X-Men are the only superheroes.
* Kirkland always thought of the series to be mature the other cartoons, this statement did came out to be true. He felt hurt when fans complained about the series not loyal to comics.
* Season 5 was to revolve around Jean forming into Phoenix but
unfotunately could not take place.
* X-Men:Evolution has few unpopular stuff such as UNO cards, Jellies, T Shirt etc.
* In X-Men TAS Jubillee played a huge role, in this show she was in the new recruits and didn't played a huge role.
* X-Men:Evolution's 6th anniversary will be celebrated on Nov 9th 2006.
*Most of the show's cast gained a lot of popularity due to ths show.
 
==Possible successor series==
A new animated series based on Marvel Comics' X-Men franchise is currently in pre-production for a Summer 2007 release. The new show, primarily focused on Wolverine, will utilize 2D and 3D animation. Twenty-six episodes have been confirmed thus far, similar to the upcoming Fantastic Four and Iron Man shows [http://www.marvel.com/company/showarticle.htm?id=139].
 
==See also==
*[[Pryde of the X-Men]]
*[[X-Men: The Animated Series]]
 
==External links==
{{Wikiquote}}
*[http://www.andersonscores.com/ Official X-Men:Evolution music site by the series' composer William Anderson]
* {{IMDb title|id=0247827|title=X-Men: Evolution}}
*[http://www.invertedstripes.com/ InvertedStripes.com]
*''[http://www.bcdb.com/cartoons/Other_Studios/F/Film_Roman_Productions/X-Men_Evolution/index.html X-Men: Evolution]'' at the [[Big Cartoon DataBase]]
*[http://www.tvtome.com/XMenEvolution/eplist.html TV.com: X-Men: Evolution episode list]
*[http://x-men.toonzone.net/ Beyond Evolution: X-Men Evolution, a fansite with detailed information on the series]
*[http://evolution.eracerx.com/ Kataclysm's X-Men: Evolution Page]
*[http://x2b.blogspot.com/ X-Men: Evolution at X2B's blog ]
*[http://www.ironcowprod.com/ Official Customs website]
*[http://www.warnervideo.com/ Official X-Men: Evolution DVD's sites]
*[http://www.stevenegordon.com/ Original art of X-Men: Evolution by the show's very own director Steven E Gordon. - include animations, designs, tips on drawing and much more]
* [http://www.us.imbd.com/ General X-Men: Evolution site with production details]
*[http://thebalcony.cjb.net/ X-Men:E volution music videos at The Balcony - a website dedicated to Nightcrawler]
*[http://www.customoftheyear.com/ X-Men: Evolution customising information]
*[http://www.hardhero.com/ Company that created X-Men:Evolution macquetts]
*[http://www.cartoonnetwork.com/ Cartoon Network's X-Men: Evolution webpage]
*[http://www.toonami.co.uk/ X-Men: Evolution at the UK Toonami website - includes downloads and show information]
*[http://www.filmroman.com/ Film Roman's, the company that created X-Men: Evolution, official website]
 
 
 
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