
Summary
- Marvel Studios releases the third teaser for Avengers: Doomsday, centering on the iconic X-Men lineup
- Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, and James Marsden reprise their roles as Professor X, Magneto, and Cyclops
- The footage teases a devastating assault on the X-Mansion involving mutant-hunting Sentinels
The Multiverse Saga is reaching its fever pitch as Marvel Studios officially pulls the curtain back on the X-Men’s involvement in the upcoming Avengers: Doomsday. Following character-specific clips for Steve Rogers and Thor, the latest teaser pivots to Westchester, delivering a somber and high-stakes look at the mutants we’ve known for over two decades.
The intersection of the Fox-Marvel era and the primary Marvel Cinematic Universe has moved beyond mere cameos. In the third of six planned miniature teasers released ahead of Avatar: Fire and Ash screenings, Marvel has confirmed that the “Uncanny” roster will play a pivotal role in the fight against Robert Downey Jr.’s Doctor Doom. This isn’t just a nostalgia play; it’s a cultural collision that effectively integrates the 2000s-era X-Men into the core Phase 6 narrative, setting the stage for a multiversal war with permanent consequences.
The teaser opens on the haunting ruins of Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters, establishing a tone of loss and urgency. A voiceover from Ian McKellen’s Magneto ponders the inevitability of death, cutting to a poignant reunion between the Master of Magnetism and Patrick Stewart’s Charles Xavier. While the veterans provide the emotional weight, James Marsden’s Cyclops delivers the visual spectacle. Sporting a comic-accurate blue-and-yellow suit — a nod to the X-Men ‘97 aesthetic — Scott Summers is seen unleashing a massive, unrestrained optic blast against a towering Sentinel.
Technical specs from the footage suggest a “hail mary” defense of the X-Mansion, with the production design leaning heavily into 90s-inspired costumes and gritty, practical destruction. Cultural insiders note that the shift from the grounded leather suits of the early 2000s to this vibrant, high-fidelity comic accuracy signals Kevin Feige’s intent to finally give these iterations of the characters the “hero shots” fans have demanded for years.
By positioning the X-Men as a central pillar of the Doomsday campaign, Marvel is betting on the emotional gravity of these legacy heroes to anchor a film that must bridge the gap between two cinematic generations.