====== Scarlet Witch (Wanda Maximoff) ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **Wanda Maximoff, the Scarlet Witch, is one of the most powerful and tragically complex figures in the Marvel Universe, a reality-warping sorceress whose immense grief and unstable control over her incredible abilities have often threatened the very fabric of existence.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** The Scarlet Witch serves as a "nexus being" in the comics, a living anchor point for her reality's timeline, and is a pivotal, long-standing member of the [[avengers]]. Her actions have repeatedly defined the status of both the magical and mutant communities across the multiverse. * **Primary Impact:** Her most significant and devastating act was in the [[house_of_m]] storyline, where she uttered the phrase "//No more mutants//," instantly depowering over 90% of the world's mutant population in an event known as the Decimation. This single act reshaped the Marvel landscape for years. * **Key Incarnations:** The core difference lies in her origin. In the Earth-616 comics, she was long believed to be a mutant and the daughter of [[magneto]], but was later retconned into a human who was experimented on as a child by the [[high_evolutionary]] and imbued with immense magical potential by the Elder God [[chthon]]. In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), she is a Sokovian native whose latent magical abilities were unlocked and amplified by exposure to the Mind Stone during [[hydra]] experiments. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The Scarlet Witch made her debut alongside her twin brother, Quicksilver, in **//The X-Men// #4** in March 1964. Created by the legendary duo of writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby, Wanda was introduced not as a hero, but as a reluctant antagonist and a founding member of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. This placement was typical of the Silver Age, establishing a clear dichotomy between Professor Xavier's heroic X-Men and Magneto's villainous Brotherhood. However, Lee and Kirby quickly saw potential beyond simple villainy. In a move that would define her character for decades, Wanda and Pietro left Magneto's side and sought redemption. They joined the Avengers in **//Avengers// #16** (May 1965) as part of the second-generation lineup famously dubbed "Cap's Kooky Quartet," alongside Hawkeye and a newly-thawed Captain America. This transition from villain to hero cemented Wanda's place as a core Marvel character, showcasing themes of atonement and the search for belonging that would follow her throughout her publication history. Her powers were initially vaguely defined as "hex power," a convenient plot device for causing bad luck, but would evolve over the decades into one of the most formidable forces in the Marvel Universe: reality-altering Chaos Magic. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of the Scarlet Witch is one of the most convoluted and heavily retconned in Marvel Comics history, standing in stark contrast to the more streamlined narrative of the MCU. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Wanda Maximoff's story begins on the slopes of Mount Wundagore in the fictional nation of Transia. For decades, the accepted origin was that she and her twin brother Pietro were the mutant children of Magneto, the Master of Magnetism. Their mother, Magda, fled from Magneto after witnessing his terrifying power and took refuge at Wundagore, where she gave birth. Fearing her husband would find them, she left the infants in the care of the bovine-like being Bova, a creation of the High Evolutionary. The twins were then given to a Romani couple, Django and Marya Maximoff, who raised them as their own. As teenagers, Wanda's hex powers manifested uncontrollably, leading an angry mob to attack them. They were saved by Magneto, who, unaware of their true relationship, recruited them into his Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. This origin story stood for years, defining Wanda's complex relationship with Magneto and the mutant community. However, the 2014 storyline //AXIS// brought a seismic retcon. During a spell, Wanda discovered that Magneto was not her biological father. A subsequent series, //Uncanny Avengers//, revealed the "true" origin: Django and Marya Maximoff //were// their biological parents. As infants, the twins were abducted by the High Evolutionary, who experimented on them, unlocking their latent powers. Wanda's affinity for magic was a result of being born on Mount Wundagore, a place where the demonic Elder God Chthon was imprisoned. Chthon's chaotic energy touched the infant Wanda, marking her as a potential vessel and granting her the immense potential to wield Chaos Magic. This retcon reclassified Wanda and Pietro from mutants (//Homo superior//) to baseline humans altered by science and magic, a controversial change that severed her ties to both Magneto and the X-Men's narrative. Her development as a sorceress was later guided by the ancient witch [[agatha_harkness]], who taught her to control her hex powers and tap into true magic, setting the stage for her evolution from a mutant with "bad luck" powers into a master of reality-altering Chaos Magic. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU provides a far more direct and emotionally grounded origin for Wanda. Born in the Eastern European nation of Sokovia in 1989 with her twin Pietro, Wanda's childhood was shattered when a mortar shell struck their apartment building, killing their parents. A second shell, manufactured by Stark Industries, landed in the rubble but failed to detonate. For two days, Wanda and Pietro stared at the unexploded bomb, a trauma that instilled in them a deep-seated hatred for Tony Stark and, by extension, the Avengers. As young adults, their desire for revenge led them to volunteer for experiments conducted by Wolfgang von Strucker's HYDRA cell. Using the Scepter, which contained the Mind Stone, Strucker subjected numerous Sokovians to its energy. Only Wanda and Pietro survived, their latent abilities unlocked and magnified. Wanda gained a suite of psionic powers, including telekinesis, telepathy, and energy manipulation. Initially debuting in //Captain America: The Winter Soldier//'s post-credits scene, their story truly begins in //Avengers: Age of Ultron//. They ally with the sentient A.I. Ultron, sharing a common enemy in Tony Stark. Wanda uses her mental abilities to torment the Avengers, even manipulating the Hulk into a destructive rampage. However, when she reads Ultron's mind and discovers his genocidal plan to cause a global extinction event, she and Pietro turn against him and join the Avengers in the Battle of Sokovia. The battle is a pivotal tragedy for Wanda, as Pietro is killed saving [[hawkeye]] and a child. This loss becomes the foundational trauma that fuels much of her subsequent journey, from her struggles with control in //Captain America: Civil War// to her grief-fueled reality warp in //WandaVision//. It is in //WandaVision// that her powers are fully defined not as a simple result of the Mind Stone, but as latent Chaos Magic she was born with, which the Stone only amplified. She learns that she is the **Scarlet Witch**, a prophesied being of immense power, capable of spontaneous creation and rewriting reality. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Wanda's power set has evolved dramatically from its simple beginnings. She is now widely considered one of the most powerful beings in the universe. * **Powers and Abilities:** * **Chaos Magic:** This is the primary source of Wanda's power. It is a primordial and immensely powerful form of magic that allows her to manipulate reality itself. Unlike the ordered magic practiced by sorcerers like [[doctor_strange]], Chaos Magic taps into the fundamental, chaotic forces of creation. It was long believed to be non-existent until Wanda's powers manifested it. This power stems from the Elder God Chthon, who infused her with a spark of his own essence at birth. * **Reality Warping:** The ultimate application of Chaos Magic. On a small scale, this manifests as her classic "hex bolts," which alter probability to cause unlikely, often disastrous, events for her enemies. On a grand scale, she can rewrite the entire fabric of existence. The most extreme example is the //House of M// event, where she altered the entire Earth-616 reality into a new world and, with three words, erased the powers of millions of mutants. * **Nexus Being:** The Scarlet Witch is one of Earth-616's "Nexus Beings," individuals who act as the focal point and anchor of their reality. These beings are crucial to the stability of the timeline and the multiverse. This status further emphasizes her cosmic importance beyond her role as an Avenger. * **Conventional Sorcery:** In addition to her innate Chaos Magic, Wanda was trained by Agatha Harkness in traditional witchcraft and sorcery. This gives her a foundational knowledge of spells, charms, and rituals, allowing her to perform magical feats even without tapping into her more dangerous reality-warping abilities. * **Weaknesses and Limitations:** * **Emotional and Mental Instability:** Wanda's greatest weakness is herself. Her immense power is directly tied to her emotional state. Periods of extreme grief, anger, or psychological trauma have repeatedly led to her losing control with catastrophic, reality-altering consequences, as seen in //Avengers Disassembled// and //House of M//. * **Physical Vulnerability:** Despite her vast power, Wanda possesses the physiology of a normal human. She is as vulnerable to physical injury as any other person when her defenses are down. * **Complexity of Magic:** Casting large-scale or highly complex spells requires intense concentration and can be physically and mentally draining. * **Personality:** Wanda is defined by tragedy and resilience. She is an intensely emotional and empathetic person who desires, above all else, a normal life and a family to love. This deep-seated yearning is the source of both her greatest joys (her marriage to Vision, the birth of her children) and her most profound sorrows. She is fiercely protective of those she cares about, but her experiences have left her with deep psychological scars, making her prone to depression and severe breakdowns. Her journey is a constant, heartbreaking struggle between the simple woman she wants to be and the cosmic force of nature she is. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's depiction of Wanda's powers has been a gradual reveal, starting with psionics and culminating in her full magical destiny. * **Powers and Abilities:** * **Psionics (via Mind Stone):** Her initial power set, unlocked by HYDRA's experiments, included: * **Telekinesis:** The ability to move and manipulate objects with her mind. This has grown exponentially, from stopping a train in //Age of Ultron// to lifting colossal alien Threshers in //Avengers: Infinity War// and single-handedly holding back a five-stone-wielding Thanos. * **Telepathy/Mental Manipulation:** The ability to read minds, project thoughts, and induce vivid, often traumatic, visions or waking nightmares in her targets. She used this to devastating effect against the Avengers in //Age of Ultron//. * **Energy Manipulation:** She can project blasts of red, psionic energy, create durable energy shields, and levitate. * **Chaos Magic (Innate Nature):** //WandaVision// reframes her abilities. It is revealed that Wanda was born a witch, possessing latent magical potential. The Mind Stone did not grant her powers, but rather //amplified// what was already there. This innate power is Chaos Magic, and her destiny is to wield it as the Scarlet Witch. * **Reality Warping (The Hex):** The most powerful demonstration of her MCU abilities was the creation of the "Westview Hex." Out of pure grief, she subconsciously generated a massive energy field that rewrote an entire town and its inhabitants into a sitcom-inspired reality. Within this hex, she could spontaneously create life (recreating Vision and conceiving her children, Billy and Tommy), transmute matter, and control every aspect of the environment. * **Darkhold Magic:** After acquiring the Book of the Damned, the [[darkhold]], her powers grew to a terrifying degree, granting her access to dark spells, dreamwalking (projecting her consciousness into a variant of herself across the multiverse), and the ability to summon demonic creatures, as seen in //Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness//. * **Comparative Analysis:** The MCU's approach streamlined Wanda's complex comic origins by initially tying her powers to a known artifact, the Mind Stone. This made her abilities more easily understood as advanced "psionics" within the sci-fi context of the early MCU. The later retcon in //WandaVision// that introduced Chaos Magic and her destiny as the Scarlet Witch cleverly brought her character more in line with her modern comic book counterpart. While the Earth-616 version's power is tied to an Elder God, the MCU's is presented as a unique, prophesied state of being, a "myth" made real. The MCU also places a far greater emphasis on her grief over Pietro and Vision as the direct and singular catalyst for her most extreme actions. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **[[quicksilver]] (Pietro Maximoff):** Her twin brother is the single most important person in her life. In both continuities, their bond is one of profound codependency and fierce mutual protection, forged through a difficult and isolated childhood. In the comics, Pietro often acts as her emotional anchor, though his own impulsiveness has sometimes led them both into trouble. In the MCU, his death during the Battle of Sokovia becomes Wanda's "nexus" trauma, the defining loss that informs her entire arc. * **[[vision]]:** The great, tragic love of Wanda's life. In both comics and the MCU, their relationship was a source of profound love and stability for Wanda. In the comics, they married and, through Wanda's magic, had two sons, leading to one of the most unique families in Marvel. In the MCU, their burgeoning romance offered a glimpse of the normal life Wanda craved, but his death at the hands of Thanos—twice, with the second time being at her own hand in a failed attempt to save the universe—shattered her completely, directly leading to the events of //WandaVision//. * **[[hawkeye]] (Clint Barton):** Clint serves as a mentor and grounding human connection for Wanda. In the comics, he was a fellow "reformed villain" in "Cap's Kooky Quartet" and a steadfast friend. In the MCU, this bond is even stronger. He is the one who inspires her to fight for good in Sokovia ("//If you step out that door, you are an Avenger//"), and he consistently acts as a surrogate older brother and moral compass for her. * **[[agatha_harkness]]:** A complex relationship that differs wildly between universes. In Earth-616, Agatha is an ancient and powerful witch who becomes Wanda's mentor, teaching her to control her powers and understand true magic. While their relationship can be stern, Agatha is fundamentally an ally. In the MCU, she is initially a deceptive antagonist, drawn to the power of the Westview Hex and seeking to steal Wanda's Chaos Magic for herself. Despite her villainous role, it is Agatha who forces Wanda to confront her identity and teaches her about the legend of the Scarlet Witch. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **[[chthon]]:** In the comic universe, the Elder God Chthon is Wanda's ultimate nemesis. He is the ancient, primordial source of Chaos Magic, and he "marked" Wanda at birth with the intent of one day using her as a vessel to return to Earth. Many of Wanda's struggles with control are subtly influenced by his demonic presence, making him the dark shadow behind her immense power. * **Doctor Doom (Victor von Doom):** A frequent and formidable rival in the comics, particularly in the realm of magic. Doom has both fought against Wanda and attempted to manipulate her for his own ends. During //The Children's Crusade//, it's revealed that he was a key figure in exacerbating her madness leading up to //House of M//, hoping to steal her reality-warping power for himself. * **[[magneto]]:** For decades, he was both her primary antagonist and the man she believed to be her father. This created an incredibly complex and emotionally fraught dynamic. Even after they reconciled and built a strained familial bond, the shadow of his extremism and her time in his Brotherhood loomed large. The later retcon that they are not related has redefined this relationship, turning it into one of shared history and mutual, albeit misplaced, identity. ==== Affiliations ==== * **[[avengers]]:** The Scarlet Witch's primary heroic family. Joining the team was her path to redemption, and she has served as a loyal and powerful member for most of her history, including stints as team leader. However, she was also the direct cause of the team's most painful dissolution during the //Avengers Disassembled// event. * **Brotherhood of Evil Mutants:** Her first "team" in the comics. She and Pietro served Magneto reluctantly, forced by a debt after he saved them from a mob. They were never true believers in his cause and took the first opportunity to leave his side. * **West Coast Avengers / Force Works:** During her time with the Vision, Wanda was a founding member of the Avengers' West Coast branch, a period that saw both the height of her domestic bliss and the beginning of her tragic downfall with the loss of her children. * **Midnight Suns:** In recent comic storylines, Wanda has become more deeply involved with the magical corner of the Marvel Universe, frequently teaming up with Doctor Strange and other mystical heroes as part of the informal Midnight Suns to combat supernatural threats. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== === The Vision and the Scarlet Witch (1985) === This limited series explored Wanda and Vision's attempt to build a normal, suburban life away from the Avengers. It is a cornerstone of her character arc, as it's here that a desperate Wanda uses her Chaos Magic to magically conceive twin sons, Billy and Tommy. The series is a bittersweet look at the life she so desperately wants, filled with domestic joy but underpinned by the unnatural source of her children's existence. This act of creation, born from love and longing, directly sets up the devastating tragedy that would later define her character. === Avengers Disassembled (2004) === This storyline marks Wanda's most catastrophic breakdown. After a stray comment from the Wasp brings back the repressed memories of her lost children—who were revealed to be magical constructs reabsorbed by the demon Mephisto—Wanda suffers a complete psychotic break. Convinced the Avengers will take her children again, she unleashes the full, untamed force of her reality-warping powers against her friends. Her subconscious magical attacks result in the destruction of Avengers Mansion and the deaths of Ant-Man (Scott Lang), the Vision, and Hawkeye. The event shatters the team, forcing them to disband, and establishes Wanda as an unstable, omega-level threat. === House of M (2005) === Directly following //Disassembled//, a catatonic Wanda is taken by Magneto. The X-Men and the newly reformed Avengers debate her fate, with many believing she is too dangerous to live. To save her, a desperate Quicksilver convinces Wanda to use her powers one last time to create a "perfect" world. She reshapes all of reality into the //House of M//, a world where Magneto and his mutant descendants rule and every hero has their heart's desire. When a small group of heroes with restored memories confronts her, a broken and grieving Wanda, manipulated by Pietro and tormented by her father's reaction, decides that the source of all her pain is her mutant heritage. She utters the three infamous words: "//No more mutants.//" Reality snaps back, but with one devastating change: nearly all of the world's mutants have been permanently depowered, an event known as the Decimation that had universe-altering consequences for years. === WandaVision (MCU) === The MCU's definitive Scarlet Witch story. Set weeks after //Avengers: Endgame//, a grief-stricken Wanda travels to the town of Westview, New Jersey, where she and Vision had planned to build a life together. Overwhelmed by her loss, she spontaneously unleashes a torrent of Chaos Magic, creating a massive hexagonal energy field (the "Hex") that rewrites the town and its residents into the setting of classic American sitcoms. Inside, she magically resurrects Vision and conceives Billy and Tommy, living out her domestic fantasy. The series follows S.W.O.R.D.'s attempts to breach the Hex and Agatha Harkness's manipulation of Wanda from within. In the climax, Wanda is forced to confront her grief, accept that her family isn't real, and dismantle the Hex. In doing so, she finally embraces her true identity and power, consciously becoming the Scarlet Witch. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610):** This version of Wanda is significantly different and more controversial. She and her brother Pietro share an overtly incestuous relationship and are far more militant followers of their father, Magneto. She is a key member of the Ultimates (this universe's Avengers) but is ultimately murdered by an Ultron robot controlled by Doctor Doom. * **Age of Apocalypse (Earth-295):** In this dark reality created when Professor X was killed in the past, Wanda is a core member of Magneto's X-Men, who lead the resistance against the tyrannical Apocalypse. She is a beloved hero in this timeline and has a romantic relationship with Rogue, eventually sacrificing her life to protect the team's base. * **Marvel Zombies (Earth-2149):** When a zombie plague sweeps the globe, the Scarlet Witch is one of the many Avengers who becomes infected. As a zombie, she retains her powers, making her an incredibly dangerous foe, though she is quickly dispatched by a zombified Hulk. * **What If... Zombies?! (MCU, Earth-89521):** A direct adaptation of the comic concept for the MCU's animated series. When a quantum virus infects the world, Wanda is among the last surviving heroes, but she is tragically infected when she is forced to put down a zombified Vision. As a zombie, she is perhaps the most powerful being on the planet, easily overpowering the other survivors and proving to be the "final boss" of this doomed reality. ===== See Also ===== * [[vision]] * [[quicksilver]] * [[avengers]] * [[magneto]] * [[house_of_m]] * [[doctor_strange]] * [[agatha_harkness]] * [[chthon]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Wanda's character was created during the Silver Age of comics, and her powers were initially ill-defined "hexes" that caused bad luck, a convenient plot device for writers.)) ((The retcon severing Wanda from Magneto and her mutant heritage in //AXIS// (2014) was highly controversial among fans. Many speculate it was motivated by the complex film rights issues between Marvel Studios (who owned Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver as Avengers) and 20th Century Fox (who owned them as mutants and children of Magneto).)) ((The phrase "No more mutants," spoken by Wanda in //House of M// #7, is one of the most famous and impactful lines in modern comic book history.)) ((Wanda's children, Billy Kaplan and Tommy Shepherd, were eventually reincarnated and became the heroes Wiccan and Speed of the [[young_avengers]]. Billy, as Wiccan, possesses magical abilities strikingly similar to his mother's.)) ((Wanda Maximoff is of Romani heritage, a key aspect of her original backstory. The depiction of this heritage has varied in quality and sensitivity over the decades of her publication.)) ((In the MCU, Elizabeth Olsen, who portrays Wanda, reportedly did not read the comics to avoid being influenced by them, instead focusing on creating a character authentic to the cinematic universe's script and vision.)) ((The concept of a "Nexus Being" in the comics was established in a //What If...?// (vol. 2) #35. It defines beings who are keystones of their reality, and any disruption to them can have far-reaching consequences for the timeline.)) ((The sitcom-inspired reality of //WandaVision// is a direct homage to several comic storylines, most notably Tom King's //The Vision// (2015) series, which explored Vision's attempt to create a synthezoid family in a suburban setting, with tragic results.))