====== MCU Phase Four: The Dawn of the Multiverse Saga ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **MCU Phase Four is the ambitious, expansive, and tonally diverse aftermath of the Infinity Saga, tasked with exploring the collective grief following //Avengers: Endgame//, introducing a new generation of heroes, and fracturing the fabric of reality to unleash the existential threat of the Multiverse.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Phase Four serves as a crucial transitional period, moving the [[marvel_cinematic_universe|Marvel Cinematic Universe]] away from the singular focus of the Infinity Stones and establishing the core concepts and primary antagonist of the new overarching narrative: The Multiverse Saga. It is defined by its expansion into long-form television storytelling via [[https://www.disneyplus.com|Disney+]]. * **Primary Impact:** Its most significant impact was the deliberate deconstruction of the established MCU. It introduced cosmic deities ([[eternals_film|The Eternals]], Celestials), explored alternate timelines and variants ([[loki_series|Loki]]), delved into street-level crime and new hero mantles ([[hawkeye_series|Hawkeye]]), and shattered the boundaries between universes ([[spider-man_no_way_home|Spider-Man: No Way Home]]), fundamentally changing the scale and rules of the setting. * **Key Incarnations:** As an era exclusive to the MCU, it has no direct counterpart in the Earth-616 comics. However, it adapts numerous modern comic storylines and concepts that had not previously been featured, such as the introduction of [[kamala_khan|Kamala Khan (Ms. Marvel)]], the rise of [[sam_wilson|Sam Wilson as Captain America]], the visual language of Matt Fraction and David Aja's //Hawkeye// run, and the multiverse-shattering events reminiscent of Jonathan Hickman's //Secret Wars (2015)//. ===== Part 2: Context and Development ===== ==== A New Era: Post-Infinity Saga ==== Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe was announced by Marvel Studios President [[kevin_feige|Kevin Feige]] at San Diego Comic-Con in July 2019, shortly after the record-shattering releases of `[[avengers_endgame|Avengers: Endgame]]` and `[[spider-man_far_from_home|Spider-Man: Far From Home]]`. The challenge facing the studio was monumental: how to follow a critically and commercially unprecedented 23-film saga that had culminated in a definitive, emotionally resonant conclusion. The answer was to pivot from expansion to introspection, and from a singular threat to a multiversal one. The initial slate revealed a new strategy: an equal emphasis on theatrical films and new, high-budget limited series created for Disney's nascent streaming service, Disney+. This allowed for deeper character studies and narrative experimentation that the two-hour film format couldn't accommodate. The original plan had `[[black_widow_film|Black Widow]]` kicking off the phase in May 2020, providing a chronological look back to bridge the gap. However, the global COVID-19 pandemic caused unprecedented disruption to Hollywood's production and release schedules. `Black Widow` was delayed over a year, and the entire slate was reshuffled. This had the unintended consequence of making `[[wandavision|WandaVision]]`, a stylistically daring and thematically heavy exploration of grief, the official entry point to Phase Four in January 2021. This accidental shift arguably defined the phase's initial tone, grounding the post-`Endgame` world not in spy-thriller action, but in the deeply personal trauma of its surviving heroes. The pandemic's effects would continue to ripple through the phase, impacting production pipelines, release dates, and potentially contributing to later criticisms regarding the consistency of visual effects. ==== In-Universe Foundation: The Blip's Aftermath ==== Phase Four opens in a world simultaneously relieved and traumatized. The event known as the "Blip"—the five-year period where half of all life vanished due to [[thanos|Thanos]]'s snap, followed by their sudden return—is the defining societal scar. The world is not simply "back to normal." The five years of loss created geopolitical chaos, economic upheaval, and a collective psychological wound. * **Geopolitical Instability:** The sudden return of billions of people created a global refugee crisis, with disputed borders, housing shortages, and resource scarcity. This tension is the central conflict in `[[the_falcon_and_the_winter_soldier|The Falcon and the Winter Soldier]]`, fueling the rise of the Flag Smashers, a group who believed life was better during the Blip. Governments established the Global Repatriation Council (GRC) to manage the crisis, but its efforts were often seen as bureaucratic and insufficient. * **The Hero Vacuum:** The world is grappling with the loss of its foundational heroes. [[tony_stark|Iron Man]] is dead, a martyr whose legacy looms over characters like [[peter_parker|Peter Parker]]. [[steve_rogers|Steve Rogers]] has retired, an old man who passed his shield and mantle to [[sam_wilson|Sam Wilson]], creating a complex and public debate about who—if anyone—could be the next [[captain_america|Captain America]]. [[natasha_romanoff|Black Widow]]'s sacrifice was largely unknown to the public, a quiet death that left her found family, particularly [[yelena_belova|Yelena Belova]], searching for purpose and someone to blame. * **Personal Grief:** The core theme of Phase Four is grief. `WandaVision` is a direct exploration of [[wanda_maximoff|Wanda Maximoff]]'s overwhelming sorrow after losing [[vision|Vision]], leading her to enslave an entire town. `Shang-Chi` deals with a family's grief over a lost matriarch. `Hawkeye` explores [[clint_barton|Clint Barton]]'s trauma and guilt over his time as the murderous vigilante Ronin. `Black Panther: Wakanda Forever` is a profound meditation on the loss of King [[tchalla|T'Challa]], a narrative powerfully shaped by the real-world passing of actor Chadwick Boseman. This focus on the internal struggles of its heroes marked a significant tonal shift from the more external, plot-driven conflicts of the Infinity Saga. ===== Part 3: In-Depth Analysis: Core Themes and Concepts ===== Phase Four, while often criticized for a perceived lack of a central throughline, was built upon several interconnected thematic pillars that collectively laid the groundwork for the Multiverse Saga. === Theme 1: Grief and Legacy === More than any other phase, Phase Four is a story about consequences. Nearly every project is anchored in a character processing loss and attempting to define their place in a world without its former titans. * **Wanda Maximoff:** Her arc is the phase's most tragic. Beginning in `WandaVision`, her inability to process Vision's death leads to the creation of the Westview Hex, a powerful but horrifying manifestation of her grief. By the end of the series, she embraces the dark power of the [[darkhold|Darkhold]] and her identity as the [[scarlet_witch|Scarlet Witch]], a path that culminates in her villainous turn in `[[doctor_strange_in_the_multiverse_of_madness|Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness]]`, where she seeks to steal a new family from another universe, convinced it's the only cure for her pain. * **Sam Wilson & Bucky Barnes:** `The Falcon and the Winter Soldier` is a direct examination of legacy. Sam Wilson feels the immense weight of Steve Rogers' shield, questioning if a Black man could, or should, be the symbol of America. His journey is about reconciling the nation's flawed history with the symbol's potential for good, ultimately choosing to take up the mantle on his own terms. Bucky Barnes, meanwhile, confronts the legacy of his past as the [[winter_soldier|Winter Soldier]], working to make amends for the sins he was forced to commit. * **Peter Parker:** `Spider-Man: No Way Home` sees Peter grappling with the legacy of Tony Stark and the immense consequences of his identity being public. His desire to fix his broken life leads to a spell that cracks the multiverse open. The film ends with the ultimate sacrifice: to save his reality, he makes everyone, including his closest friends, forget Peter Parker ever existed. He is left utterly alone, a street-level hero stripped of the Stark-tech and Avengers-level support that had defined his early career, forced to forge a new legacy from scratch. * **The Next Generation:** A key function of Phase Four was the "passing of the torch." [[kate_bishop|Kate Bishop]] becomes Clint Barton's archery protégé in `Hawkeye`. Yelena Belova grapples with her sister Natasha's legacy. [[shuri|Shuri]] must step into the role of the [[black_panther|Black Panther]] after her brother's death. This theme established a new roster of heroes to carry the MCU forward. === Theme 2: The Cracking of Reality: The Multiverse === The single most important overarching concept introduced in Phase Four is the Multiverse. While hinted at before, this phase established its mechanics, dangers, and central antagonist. * **The Time Variance Authority (TVA):** Introduced in `Loki`, the [[time_variance_authority|TVA]] is a seemingly infinite bureaucracy that exists outside of time and space. Their stated mission is to protect the "Sacred Timeline" by "pruning" any deviation or variant that could lead to a multiversal war. This series established the core vocabulary: "Variants" (alternate versions of a person from different timelines), "Nexus Events" (choices that cause a timeline to branch), and the cyclical nature of time. * **He Who Remains:** The finale of `Loki` Season 1 reveals the truth: the TVA was created by a single being, [[he_who_remains|He Who Remains]], a variant of a 31st-century scientist. He explains that his other variants discovered the multiverse, leading to an all-out war that threatened to destroy all of existence. To stop it, he isolated a single "sacred" timeline and created the TVA to police it. When Sylvie kills him, she doesn't liberate the timeline; she shatters it, unleashing infinite branches and, with them, his far more dangerous variants. * **The Arrival of Kang:** The death of He Who Remains directly sets up the arrival of [[kang_the_conqueror|Kang the Conqueror]], the primary antagonist of the Multiverse Saga. He is the most formidable of the variants, a time-traveling despot bent on total domination of the timeline. The final shot of `Loki` Season 1, with Loki arriving in a new TVA ruled openly by a Kang-like figure, signals the new central threat. * **Incursions and Dreamwalking:** `Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness` further expanded on the dangers. It introduced the concept of "Incursions"—catastrophic events where two universes collide and annihilate one another, often caused by prolonged travel between worlds. It also introduced "Dreamwalking," a forbidden form of magic from the Darkhold that allows a sorcerer to possess their variant's body in another universe, a practice that further destabilizes reality. === Theme 3: Expanding the Cosmos and the Supernatural === Phase Four significantly broadened the scope of the MCU beyond Earth-bound heroes and traditional sci-fi aliens. * **The Celestials and Eternals:** The film `Eternals` introduced two of the most powerful concepts from the comics. The [[celestials|Celestials]] are ancient, god-like cosmic beings of unimaginable power who create stars and galaxies. They seed planets with life to cultivate energy for the birth of new Celestials, a process that ultimately destroys the host planet. The [[eternals|Eternals]] are their synthetically-created agents, immortal beings sent to protect nascent civilizations from the Deviants (their flawed counterparts) to ensure the planet's population grows large enough for the "Emergence" of a new Celestial. This film added a layer of cosmic horror and moral ambiguity to the MCU's creation myth. * **Mythology and Magic:** `Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings` moved away from cosmic threats to explore a world of Chinese mythology, introducing the mystical dimension of Ta Lo, creatures like the Great Protector, and a new form of power in the [[ten_rings_artifact|Ten Rings]] themselves, which are shown to be far more ancient and mysterious than simple technology. `Moon Knight` plunged into Egyptian mythology, featuring avatars of gods like Khonshu and Ammit. * **The Horror Genre:** Marvel Studios began experimenting with genre, most notably horror. `Werewolf by Night`, presented as a "Special Presentation," was a loving homage to classic Universal monster movies of the 1930s and 40s. It introduced literal monsters like werewolves and the [[man-thing|Man-Thing]] into the MCU, opening the door for a supernatural underworld of horror-based characters. `Multiverse of Madness`, directed by horror icon Sam Raimi, also featured significant horror elements, including zombies, demonic spirits, and unsettling body horror. === Theme 4: The Human Element: Street-Level Heroes and Geopolitics === While expanding into the cosmos, Phase Four also dedicated significant time to its most grounded characters and the political landscape of a post-Blip world. * **Contessa Valentina Allegra de Fontaine:** A shadowy new power player, [[contessa_valentina_allegra_de_fontaine|Valentina Allegra de Fontaine]] (Val) appeared in `The Falcon and the Winter Soldier` and `Black Widow`. Operating in the morally grey spaces left by S.H.I.E.L.D.'s collapse and the Sokovia Accords, she is recruiting a team of anti-heroes and reformed villains. She enlists [[john_walker|John Walker (U.S. Agent)]] after his public disgrace and manipulates Yelena Belova by telling her Clint Barton was responsible for her sister's death. Val is clearly building a team—likely the [[thunderbolts|Thunderbolts]]—to serve her own mysterious agenda. * **Street-Level Threats:** `Hawkeye` brought the MCU firmly back to the streets of New York City. The primary antagonists were not aliens or gods, but the Tracksuit Mafia and their enigmatic leader, [[wilson_fisk|Wilson Fisk (Kingpin)]], reprised by Vincent D'Onofrio from the [[daredevil_series|Netflix Daredevil series]]. This was a major development, confirming that characters from the former Marvel Television shows could be integrated into the mainline MCU canon. * **Social Commentary:** Several projects directly tackled real-world issues. `The Falcon and the Winter Soldier` explored systemic racism through Sam's journey and the story of Isaiah Bradley, a Black super-soldier who was experimented on and imprisoned for decades. `Ms. Marvel` was a celebrated look at family, faith, and cultural identity through the eyes of a Pakistani-American teenager. `She-Hulk: Attorney at Law` used a comedic, fourth-wall-breaking format to satirize toxic fandom, workplace sexism, and the legal absurdities of a world with superheroes. ===== Part 4: The Complete Slate: Projects of Phase Four ===== Phase Four was the largest phase to date, comprising seven films, eight television series, and two "Special Presentations" released over a span of less than two years. ^ Project Title ^ Type ^ US Release Date ^ Director(s) / Head Writer ^ Key Character/Concept Introductions ^ Synopsis & Role in Saga ^ | [[wandavision|WandaVision]] | Disney+ Series | 2021-01-15 | Matt Shakman / Jac Schaeffer | [[scarlet_witch|The Scarlet Witch]], [[monica_rambeau|Monica Rambeau (Photon)]], [[agatha_harkness|Agatha Harkness]], White Vision | Wanda Maximoff, consumed by grief, creates an alternate reality in Westview, NJ. This series explores her trauma, unleashes her full power, and introduces the Darkhold, setting up her villainous arc. | | [[the_falcon_and_the_winter_soldier|The Falcon and the Winter Soldier]] | Disney+ Series | 2021-03-19 | Kari Skogland / Malcolm Spellman | [[sam_wilson|Sam Wilson as Captain America]], [[john_walker|John Walker (U.S. Agent)]], [[contessa_valentina_allegra_de_fontaine|Valentina Allegra de Fontaine]], [[isaiah_bradley|Isaiah Bradley]] | Sam Wilson and Bucky Barnes team up to stop the anti-nationalist Flag Smashers. The series culminates in Sam embracing the shield and becoming the new Captain America, while setting up the Thunderbolts. | | [[loki_series|Loki]] (Season 1) | Disney+ Series | 2021-06-09 | Kate Herron / Michael Waldron | Variants, [[time_variance_authority|TVA]], [[he_who_remains|He Who Remains]], [[sylvie|Sylvie]], [[mobius_m_mobius|Mobius M. Mobius]] | A 2012 variant of Loki is captured by the TVA and forced to help hunt a dangerous variant of himself (Sylvie). This series is the cornerstone of the Multiverse Saga, shattering the Sacred Timeline and introducing Kang the Conqueror's variants. | | [[black_widow_film|Black Widow]] | Film | 2021-07-09 | Cate Shortland | [[yelena_belova|Yelena Belova]], [[red_guardian|Red Guardian]], [[taskmaster|Taskmaster (Antonia Dreykov)]] | Set between //Civil War// and //Infinity War//, this film forces Natasha Romanoff to confront her past in the Red Room. It introduces her adoptive family, most importantly Yelena, who becomes the new Black Widow. | | [[what_if_series|What If...?]] (Season 1) | Disney+ Animated Series | 2021-08-11 | Bryan Andrews / A.C. Bradley | [[the_watcher|The Watcher]], [[captain_carter|Captain Carter]], Strange Supreme, Guardians of the Multiverse | An animated anthology exploring alternate realities within the multiverse. It further fleshes out the concept of variants and multiversal threats, with Strange Supreme's arc serving as a cautionary tale. | | [[shang-chi_and_the_legend_of_the_ten_rings|Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings]] | Film | 2021-09-03 | Destin Daniel Cretton | [[shang-chi|Shang-Chi]], [[wenwu|Wenwu (The Mandarin)]], [[xialing|Xialing]], [[katy_chen|Katy]], [[ten_rings_artifact|The Ten Rings (Artifact)]] | Shang-Chi is drawn back into the world of his father, Wenwu, the leader of the Ten Rings organization. The film introduces a new corner of the MCU rooted in mythology and martial arts, with the rings' origin being a major new mystery. | | [[eternals_film|Eternals]] | Film | 2021-11-05 | Chloé Zhao | The [[eternals|Eternals]] (team), [[celestials|Celestials]], [[dane_whitman|Dane Whitman (pre-Black Knight)]], [[eros|Eros (Starfox)]], [[pip_the_troll|Pip the Troll]], [[blade|Blade (voice cameo)]] | A race of immortal beings reunites to protect humanity from the Deviants and a cataclysmic "Emergence." This film rewrites the history of the MCU, introduces god-level beings, and ends with a Celestial judging Earth. | | [[hawkeye_series|Hawkeye]] | Disney+ Series | 2021-11-24 | Rhys Thomas / Jonathan Igla | [[kate_bishop|Kate Bishop]], [[echo_character|Echo (Maya Lopez)]], [[wilson_fisk|Kingpin (MCU canonization)]] | Clint Barton's Christmas vacation is derailed when he meets Kate Bishop, a young archer who has stumbled into his past as Ronin. A street-level story that passes the Hawkeye mantle and officially brings Kingpin into the MCU. | | [[spider-man_no_way_home|Spider-Man: No Way Home]] | Film | 2021-12-17 | Jon Watts | Canonization of [[tobey_maguire_spider-man|Tobey Maguire]] & [[andrew_garfield_spider-man|Andrew Garfield]]'s Spider-Men, past Sony villains | Peter Parker's identity is revealed, so he asks Doctor Strange for a spell to fix it. The spell goes wrong, breaking open the multiverse and bringing in villains and heroes from previous Spider-Man film franchises. Ends with Peter alone and forgotten. | | [[doctor_strange_in_the_multiverse_of_madness|Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness]] | Film | 2022-05-06 | Sam Raimi | [[america_chavez|America Chavez]], The Illuminati (Earth-838), [[clea|Clea]] | Doctor Strange must protect America Chavez, a teen who can travel the multiverse, from a corrupted Scarlet Witch. The film is a horror-tinged trip through alternate realities, introducing Incursions as a major threat. | | [[moon_knight_series|Moon Knight]] | Disney+ Series | 2022-03-30 | Mohamed Diab / Jeremy Slater | [[moon_knight|Moon Knight (Marc Spector / Steven Grant)]], Khonshu, [[layla_el-faouly|Layla El-Faouly (Scarlet Scarab)]], Arthur Harrow | A museum gift shop employee with Dissociative Identity Disorder discovers he is the avatar for the Egyptian moon god Khonshu. A self-contained psychological thriller that expands the MCU's supernatural and mythological elements. | | [[ms_marvel_series|Ms. Marvel]] | Disney+ Series | 2022-06-08 | Bisha K. Ali (Head Writer) | [[kamala_khan|Kamala Khan (Ms. Marvel)]], The Clandestines, Introduction of Mutants in the MCU | Kamala Khan, a Pakistani-American teen from Jersey City, gains powers from a family heirloom. A coming-of-age story that ends with the groundbreaking revelation that Kamala is a mutant, signaled by the X-Men '97 theme. | | [[thor_love_and_thunder|Thor: Love and Thunder]] | Film | 2022-07-08 | Taika Waititi | [[gorr_the_god_butcher|Gorr the God Butcher]], [[jane_foster|Jane Foster as The Mighty Thor]], [[zeus|Zeus]], Eternity, Hercules | Thor teams up with the Mighty Thor (a Mjolnir-wielding Jane Foster) to stop Gorr the God Butcher. The film explores themes of love, faith, and loss, ending with Thor adopting Gorr's resurrected daughter. | | [[i_am_groot|I Am Groot]] | Disney+ Animated Shorts | 2022-08-10 | Kirsten Lepore | N/A | A series of shorts following Baby Groot's adventures. Primarily a comedic side-story with little impact on the main saga. | | [[she-hulk_attorney_at_law|She-Hulk: Attorney at Law]] | Disney+ Series | 2022-08-18 | Jessica Gao | [[jennifer_walters|Jennifer Walters (She-Hulk)]], [[daredevil|Daredevil (new suit)]], K.E.V.I.N. | Lawyer Jennifer Walters accidentally gets a dose of her cousin Bruce Banner's blood and becomes She-Hulk. A fourth-wall-breaking legal comedy that satirizes the MCU itself, culminating in a meta-narrative where she confronts the AI "in charge" of the MCU's stories. | | [[werewolf_by_night|Werewolf by Night]] | Disney+ Special Presentation | 2022-10-07 | Michael Giacchino | [[jack_russell|Jack Russell (Werewolf by Night)]], [[elsa_bloodstone|Elsa Bloodstone]], [[man-thing|Man-Thing]], The Bloodstone | A black-and-white horror special where a secret cabal of monster hunters gathers to hunt a monster for a powerful relic. It fully opens the door to the classic horror corner of the Marvel universe. | | [[black_panther_wakanda_forever|Black Panther: Wakanda Forever]] | Film | 2022-11-11 | Ryan Coogler | [[shuri|Shuri as Black Panther]], [[namor|Namor]] and the Talokanil, [[riri_williams|Riri Williams (Ironheart)]] | Following the death of King T'Challa, Wakanda must defend itself from a new global threat: the underwater nation of Talokan, led by Namor. A powerful story of grief, legacy, and the burden of leadership, serving as the finale to Phase Four. | | [[the_guardians_of_the_galaxy_holiday_special|The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special]] | Disney+ Special Presentation | 2022-11-25 | James Gunn | [[cosmo_the_spacedog|Cosmo the Spacedog (speaking role)]] | Mantis and Drax try to cheer up Peter Quill by kidnapping his childhood hero, Kevin Bacon, for Christmas. A lighthearted epilogue to Phase Four, revealing that Mantis is Quill's half-sister. | ===== Part 5: Key Characters and Arcs ===== ==== The Scarlet Witch's Descent ==== Wanda Maximoff's arc is arguably the central character narrative of Phase Four. It is a tragic trajectory from a grieving hero to a full-fledged, multiversal villain. In `WandaVision`, her pain is sympathetic, even as her actions (mind-controlling an entire town) are monstrous. The series ends with her accepting her grief and beginning to study the Darkhold. This study, however, corrupts her. By `Multiverse of Madness`, she is completely consumed by the Darkhold's evil influence, believing that the only way to cure her loneliness is to find a universe where her sons are real and kill their mother to take her place. Her rampage across the multiverse demonstrates a power level that rivals any previous MCU threat, and her eventual self-sacrifice to destroy the Darkhold in every universe is a moment of horrific clarity, solidifying her as one of the most complex and tragic figures in the entire MCU. ==== The Mantle of Captain America ==== The journey of Sam Wilson from the Falcon to Captain America was the emotional and political core of `The Falcon and The Winter Soldier`. Initially, Sam rejects the shield, believing the symbol is too complicated and that no one could replace Steve Rogers. His journey forces him to confront America's troubled racial history through Isaiah Bradley, a victim of the same super-soldier program. He realizes that he cannot allow the shield's legacy to be defined by its past or co-opted by the unstable John Walker. He must redefine it. His decision to become Captain America is not one of inheritance, but of choice and purpose. His final speech, where he declares "I'm a Black man carrying the stars and stripes," is a powerful thesis statement for a new, more aware era of heroism. ==== The Arrival of Kang the Conqueror ==== While Thanos was slowly built up over a decade, his successor was introduced with shocking speed. The entire Multiverse Saga hinges on the final episode of `Loki` Season 1. The introduction of He Who Remains, a charismatic, weary, and terrifyingly intelligent being, re-contextualizes the entire MCU. He is not a simple villain; he is the man who //stopped// the other villains—his own variants—by committing the atrocity of erasing free will from an entire timeline. Sylvie's choice to kill him is understandable but catastrophic, as it unleashes the infinite, more monstrous versions of himself, including Kang the Conqueror. This single event is the "snap" of the Multiverse Saga, the inciting incident that sets all future conflicts in motion. ==== The New Generation ==== A primary, if less overt, goal of Phase Four was to populate the MCU with a new wave of younger heroes, many of whom are members of the [[young_avengers|Young Avengers]] in the comics. This includes: * **Kate Bishop:** The co-lead of `Hawkeye`, she is a skilled archer who becomes Clint's partner. * **Yelena Belova:** Natasha's "sister," a highly trained Black Widow with a sarcastic wit. * **America Chavez:** A teen with the unique power to punch holes between universes. * **Kamala Khan:** A fangirl-turned-superhero and the MCU's first confirmed mutant hero. * **Riri Williams:** A genius MIT student who builds her own suit of armor, becoming Ironheart. * **Eli Bradley:** The grandson of Isaiah Bradley, who in the comics becomes the hero Patriot. * **Billy and Tommy Maximoff:** Wanda's magically-created sons, who in the comics are the heroes Wiccan and Speed. While no official team-up has been announced, the deliberate introduction of these specific characters strongly suggests that a Young Avengers-style project is an eventual goal for the MCU. ===== Part 6: Critical Reception and Fan Discourse ===== Phase Four is arguably the most divisive and debated era of the MCU. After the widely-praised conclusion of the Infinity Saga, the disparate nature of Phase Four's projects led to a fractured response from both critics and audiences. Common points of praise included: * **Character Depth:** The Disney+ series format allowed for deeper, more nuanced character studies than ever before. The explorations of Wanda's grief, Loki's identity, and Sam Wilson's burden were lauded as some of the best character work in the franchise's history. * **Tonal Diversity:** Phase Four was praised for its willingness to experiment with genre. It delivered a sitcom pastiche (`WandaVision`), a political thriller (`TFATWS`), a full-blown horror film (`Multiverse of Madness`), a martial arts epic (`Shang-Chi`), a courtroom comedy (`She-Hulk`), and a monster movie (`Werewolf by Night`), preventing a feeling of creative stagnation. * **Bold Introductions:** The introductions of characters like Shang-Chi and Kamala Khan were celebrated for bringing new cultures and perspectives to the forefront of the MCU. However, the phase also faced significant criticism: * **Lack of Cohesion:** A frequent complaint was the seeming lack of a clear, overarching narrative connecting the projects, unlike the Infinity Stone thread of the first three phases. To many, the projects felt disconnected, leading to a sense of "superhero fatigue" and a feeling of being assigned "homework" to keep up. * **Inconsistent Quality:** The sheer volume of content (17 projects in under two years) led to a perception of inconsistent quality, particularly in writing and visual effects. The term "slop" became a popular pejorative in online discourse to describe rushed-feeling CGI in some later projects. * **The "Multiverse" as a Crutch:** Some critics argued that the multiverse, while full of potential, was sometimes used as a tool for simple fan service (e.g., bringing back old actors) rather than for meaningful storytelling, and that its rules were often confusing or poorly explained. Ultimately, Phase Four's legacy may be that of a necessary, if sometimes messy, rebuilding period. It cleared the board after `Endgame`, used its new television platform to explore its characters' trauma, and laid a vast, sprawling foundation for the cosmic war against Kang the Conqueror to come in Phases Five and Six. ===== See Also ===== * [[mcu_phase_three]] * [[mcu_phase_five]] * [[the_multiverse_saga]] * [[kang_the_conqueror]] * [[avengers_endgame]] * [[loki_series]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Phase Four's release order was significantly altered by the COVID-19 pandemic. `Black Widow` was intended to be the first project released, with `The Falcon and the Winter Soldier` as the first Disney+ series. The shuffle that placed `WandaVision` first inadvertently set a more somber, introspective tone for the entire phase.)) ((The post-credits scene of `Eternals` featured the first on-screen appearance of Mahershala Ali's Blade, though only as a voice. It also introduced Harry Styles as Eros/Starfox, the brother of Thanos.)) ((The revelation that Kamala Khan is a mutant in `Ms. Marvel` was a significant departure from her comic book origin as an Inhuman. The change was likely made to streamline her introduction into the wider MCU and to begin laying the groundwork for the X-Men's eventual arrival. The musical cue used for the reveal was a snippet of the iconic theme from //X-Men: The Animated Series//.)) ((`Spider-Man: No Way Home` marked an unprecedented collaboration between Marvel Studios and Sony Pictures, fully integrating two previous generations of Sony's //Spider-Man// films into the MCU's multiverse canon.)) ((The character of K.E.V.I.N. (Knowledge Enhanced Visual Interconnectivity Nexus) in the `She-Hulk: Attorney at Law` finale is a direct, satirical stand-in for Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige, humorously acknowledging and lampshading common criticisms of the MCU's narrative formulas.)) ((`Black Panther: Wakanda Forever` is the first project in the MCU where the opening Marvel Studios logo sequence is completely silent, done as a mark of respect for the late Chadwick Boseman.))