AI anime & comic style

Draw X-Men style mutant superhero teams with AI

Training-room briefings, telepathic halos, ice plumes, magnetic shards, and navy-and-gold team uniforms in thick American comic ink.

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Free preview Style: X-Men

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About X-Men style

X-Men style art captures the Marvel mutant-team look: original heroes posed together in glass-walled training rooms, energy effects spilling around them, navy-and-gold uniforms with abstract chest emblems, and thick American comic ink. Great for academy rosters, team-up splash pages, and rooftop missions.

X-Men style is built on the Marvel mutant-team formula: a roster of young heroes with very different powers, drawn together in tight group compositions and trained inside a glass-walled academy. Costumes share a unified team palette of deep navy and warm gold with abstract chest emblems instead of the trademarked X, so several heroes still read as one squad. Powers are shown as flat graphic shapes around the figure: a telepathic halo, an ice plume, magnetic shards rising off the floor, kinetic energy ribbons trailing behind a kick.

For prompts, set the scene first (training room with observation deck, briefing table with a backlit mentor, rooftop or wilderness mission) and then describe one to three original heroes by power and silhouette rather than by name. Layer in American comic visual language: thick contour ink, halftone dot shading, motion lines across the action, and a low-angle group pose. Keep chest emblems as a chevron, diamond, or split-color panel.

What separates this look from other superhero pages is the team-as-school setup. Bright costumes contrast with the academy interior, mentors stand backlit in front of chalkboards covered in power diagrams, and group splash pages place the leader in front while supporting heroes fan out behind with their effects filling the background.

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Example prompts

X-Men style example 1
1

"X-Men style, american comic art in X-Men style, original mutant team in a glass-walled training room with observation deck behind, three heroes with distinct effects (telepathic halo around the head, ice plume from open palms, magnetic shards rising off the floor), navy and gold uniforms with abstract chevron chest emblems, low-angle group pose, thick contour ink, halftone dot shading, no text, no logos"

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X-Men style example 2
2

"X-Men style rooftop at night, two original mutant heroes in low-angle hero poses, cobalt spotlight from below and warm gold rim light, jackets and short capes whipping in the wind, hazy city skyline with bokeh windows in the background, dramatic cloud bank above, thick American comic ink with halftone shading, no text, no logos"

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X-Men style example 3
3

"X-Men style briefing room, warm wood interior, chalkboard covered with mutant power diagrams, an original mentor figure pointing at a circled diagram, four students leaning forward at a long table with expressive faces, late-afternoon sun shafts cutting through tall windows, American comic ink with halftone shading, no text, no logos"

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Free preview Style: X-Men

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Why choose Anifusion?

🏫

Glass-walled training rooms

Glass-walled simulator chambers, raised observation decks, round briefing tables, and high-tech academy architecture as the recurring backdrop.

Power effects as graphic shapes

Telepathic halos, ice plumes, magnetic shards, and kinetic energy ribbons drawn as flat graphic shapes wrapped around each figure rather than soft photo glow.

🎨

Navy-and-gold team palette

A unified palette of deep navy, warm gold trim, and accent red on belts and emblems so a roster of different powers still reads as one squad.

🧠

Backlit mentor briefings

A mentor figure backlit in front of a chalkboard of power diagrams, with team members leaning over a round briefing table in the foreground.

📰

Group splash-page composition

Leader in the foreground, supporting heroes fanning out into the mid-ground, and energy effects filling the background as a poster-style splash.

✒️

Thick American comic ink

Thick contour ink, halftone dot shading, motion lines streaking across action panels, and tight 6 to 9 panel grids for narrative beats.

Create in 3 easy steps

1

Write your prompt

Describe your vision for X-Men style in plain language.

2

Refine settings

Tune the aspect ratio and style strength to your liking.

3

Generate and enjoy

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Frequently asked questions

Prompt tips, rights, and workflow. Sign up free to generate in this look today.

Free preview Style: X-Men

Generate a X-Men scene

Type a scene below and press Generate.

Start from an example
No credit card. We'll save your prompt and generate it after sign up. 100 credits included.
How do I describe mutant powers without using trademark names?

Describe the visible effect rather than the named technique. Phrases like "magnetic shards rising from the floor", "telepathic halo around the temples", "ice plume spreading from outstretched hands", or "kinetic energy ribbons trailing a kick" all read as classic mutant powers without naming any specific character.

How many heroes should I put in a team scene?

Three to six heroes works best for a clean group shot. Beyond that, faces start to crowd and the power effects overlap into noise. For a bigger roster, keep two or three figures fully detailed in the foreground and place the rest as silhouettes against the energy effects in the background.

What camera angles work best for team poses?

A low-angle shot looking up at the team makes them feel heroic and gives the energy effects room to fill the upper half of the frame. For action sequences, an overhead view with a circular power ring at the center is a strong layout. For posters, place the leader slightly forward and let the supporting heroes fan out behind in a shallow arc.

How should I design the team costumes?

Anchor the squad with one shared palette like deep navy and warm gold so the group reads as a unit at a glance. Each hero can have personal touches such as a short cape, gloves, or a half mask, but the base color and trim should match. Keep chest emblems abstract: a chevron, diamond, or split-color panel rather than the trademarked X.

What settings work best for X-Men style scenes?

The franchise lives on the contrast between academy life and field missions. Glass-walled training rooms, classroom briefings with a backlit mentor, rooftop or city missions at night, and outdoor wilderness training all sit naturally in this look. Cycling between two of these in the same piece gives the work a story arc instead of a single pin-up.

What should I leave out of the prompt?

Keep "anime cel shading" and "watercolor flat" out, since both pull the result away from American comic ink. Skip the names of specific X-Men characters and their signature attacks too, because they nudge the model toward likenesses you do not want for an original roster. Build your own squad by power and silhouette instead.

Does this style work for black-and-white pages?

It does, and many classic X-Men reprints lean into it. Drop the color words and emphasize ink technique instead: "thick contour ink", "halftone dots for shading", "white silhouette flash on power effects", and "deep black areas for dramatic mood". The line work alone carries plenty of weight in monochrome.

What other styles pair well with X-Men?

Spider-Man and Superman share the same American comic ink lineage and slot in well as crossover pages. For a Japanese counterpart on superhero teams, My Hero Academia is a natural pairing. If you want a darker contrast piece, Batman style sits across the genre nicely.

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