====== Ultimatum ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: A cataclysmic, universe-altering comic book event from 2008-2009 that served as a controversial finale for many characters and storylines within the Ultimate Marvel (Earth-1610) imprint, resulting in the mass death of its heroes and villains.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** `Ultimatum` was engineered to be a hard reboot of the [[ultimate_marvel|Ultimate Marvel]] line, clearing the board of numerous long-running plot threads and characters in a brutal, final fashion. It stands as the single most destructive event in Earth-1610's history. * **Primary Impact:** The event is infamous for its graphic violence and the shocking deaths of dozens of major characters, including [[professor_x|Professor X]], [[wolverine]], [[magneto]], [[thor]], and [[doctor_strange]]. Its overwhelmingly negative reception from fans and critics significantly damaged the Ultimate imprint's brand and legacy. * **Key Incarnations:** `Ultimatum` is exclusively a comic book event that took place on **Earth-1610** (the Ultimate Universe). It has **no counterpart** in the Prime Comic Universe (Earth-616) or the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), and its extreme tone makes a direct adaptation highly unlikely. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The `Ultimatum` event was published by Marvel Comics from November 2008 to July 2009. The core limited series, titled `Ultimatum`, consisted of five issues and was helmed by writer [[jeph_loeb|Jeph Loeb]] and artist [[david_finch|David Finch]]. The event was a culmination of storylines seeded by Loeb in his preceding work on the Ultimate line, particularly in `The Ultimates 3` and `Ultimate Power`. The creative intent, as articulated by Marvel's then Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada, was to create a definitive and impactful change to the Ultimate Universe, which had been perceived by some as having lost the streamlined, "modernized" appeal that initially made it successful. The goal was to provide a shocking, conclusive end to the first "phase" of the Ultimate line and relaunch it under a new banner, "Ultimate Comics." The creators were given significant freedom to kill off major characters, a move intended to demonstrate that the stakes in the Ultimate Universe were genuinely higher than in the mainstream Earth-616 continuity. However, the execution of this premise, with its focus on graphic violence and seemingly senseless character deaths, became a major point of contention and has defined the event's legacy ever since. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The cataclysm of `Ultimatum` did not occur in a vacuum. It was the direct result of grief, manipulation, and vengeance that had been building for months across several Ultimate titles. === Prelude: The Seeds of Catastrophe === The primary catalyst for `Ultimatum` was the death of the [[scarlet_witch|Scarlet Witch]] (Wanda Lehnsherr) in `The Ultimates 3 #5`. She was seemingly assassinated by a bullet fired from a robotic duplicate of Ultron. Her death devastated her twin brother, [[quicksilver|Quicksilver]] (Pietro Lehnsherr), and shattered their father, [[magneto|Magneto]], the master of magnetism. Unbeknownst to Magneto, the entire scenario was orchestrated by [[doctor_doom|Doctor Doom]] (Victor van Damme), who had manipulated a grieving Pietro. Doom convinced Pietro that his own father, Magneto, was ultimately responsible for Wanda's vulnerability and that humanity did not deserve to live in a world she could no longer inhabit. At the same time, Doom had also secretly held the Scarlet Witch's killer, the Ultron robot controlled by [[hank_pym|Doctor Hank Pym]]'s brain patterns, and used it to further his own agenda. Fueled by unimaginable grief and manipulated by Doom, Magneto came to believe that humanity and its so-called "heroes" were a cancer that had taken everything from him. He retrieved his iconic helmet, reclaimed Mjolnir (the Ultimate version of Thor's hammer, which he briefly wielded), and declared his final, ultimate war on the world. His ultimatum was simple: surrender the planet or face total annihilation. === The Ultimatum Wave: A World Drowned === Magneto made good on his threat in the most devastating way imaginable. Using his absolute mastery over the planet's electromagnetic field, he reversed the magnetic poles. This single act triggered a global apocalypse. The immediate effect was a series of mega-tsunamis, dubbed the "Ultimatum Wave," that crashed into coastal cities worldwide. New York City, the heart of the Ultimate Universe's superhero community, was completely submerged. Millions died in an instant. The Fantastic Four's Baxter Building was flooded, the streets of Manhattan became a watery graveyard, and heroes like [[spider-man|Spider-Man]] and the Hulk were caught in the deluge. Simultaneously, the weather patterns of the entire planet were thrown into chaos. Latveria was encased in a block of magical ice by Doctor Doom, while other parts of the world experienced blizzards and volcanic eruptions. This initial, overwhelming act of destruction served as the opening salvo of Magneto's war, a declaration from which there could be no turning back. The world's remaining heroes were left scattered, broken, and fighting for survival in a world that was actively trying to kill them. ===== Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath ===== `Ultimatum` was not just a five-issue miniseries; it was a line-wide event with significant tie-ins in `Ultimate Spider-Man`, `Ultimate X-Men`, and `Ultimate Fantastic Four`. === Timeline of Destruction: A Blow-by-Blow Account === - **The Initial Onslaught (`Ultimatum #1`):** Magneto triggers the Ultimatum Wave. New York is flooded. Thousands of civilians die instantly. The X-Men Dazzler and Beast are drowned, among the first hero casualties. The [[fantastic_four|Fantastic Four]] are separated, with Susan Storm holding back the floodwaters with her force fields while Reed Richards is missing. [[spider-man|Spider-Man]] is seen helping people amidst the chaos. Giant-Man (Hank Pym) discovers the Wasp's lifeless body. - **Desperate Struggles and First Confrontations (`Ultimatum #2`):** A furious Giant-Man finds the Blob cannibalizing the Wasp's corpse. In a fit of rage, Pym bites the Blob's head off, killing him. In the submerged ruins of Doctor Strange's Sanctum Sanctorum, Dormammu manifests and graphically kills [[doctor_strange|Doctor Strange]] by constricting him with his own cape until his head explodes. Thor travels to Valhalla to reclaim the soul of his beloved, Valkyrie, and confronts Hela. [[captain_america|Captain America]] leads a team to find survivors. - **The Latverian Front and Mutant Massacre (`Ultimatum #3`):** The X-Men and [[ultimates|Ultimates]] survivors mount an assault on Magneto's floating citadel. Meanwhile, a secondary team consisting of Reed Richards, Doctor Doom, Nick Fury, and others infiltrates Latveria. At the X-Mansion, William Stryker and his anti-mutant militia, having survived the wave, attack the school and murder several young mutants, including Syndicate and Juggernaut. - **The Citadel Assault and Horrific Losses (`Ultimatum #4`):** The assault on Magneto's citadel goes horribly wrong. The villain Multiple Man, now a group of suicide bombers, blows up a section of the citadel, killing the X-Man Cannonball. [[wolverine|Wolverine]] manages to track down Magneto and stab him, but Magneto retaliates by using his powers to rip the Adamantium from Wolverine's skeleton, killing him instantly in a gruesome display. Simultaneously, he uses Cyclops's own visor to kill him with an optic blast and tears Iron Man's armor apart. - **The Final Confrontation and Revelation (`Ultimatum #5`):** As the battle rages, Magneto is shown the truth by Jean Grey: mutants are not the next stage of evolution or God's chosen people, but a man-made creation from the Super-Soldier program. His entire life's philosophy is shattered. Distraught and broken, he attempts to reverse the planetary damage but is stopped by the surviving heroes. A vengeful Cyclops, having survived Magneto's earlier attack, unleashes a full-power optic blast and vaporizes Magneto's head, killing him. Shortly after, Nick Fury confronts the true mastermind, Doctor Doom, who reveals his role in manipulating the entire event. The Thing, enraged at Doom's treachery, crushes his head. Captain America holds a public speech, blaming mutants for the entire catastrophe. === Key Turning Points & Infamous Moments === The legacy of `Ultimatum` is defined by its shocking and often gratuitous moments of violence, which served as the story's primary turning points. * **The Cannibalism of the Wasp:** Perhaps the most infamous scene in the entire event occurs when Hank Pym finds the Blob eating Janet van Dyne's body. Pym's subsequent revenge, biting the Blob's head off, was a moment of pure, unrestrained horror that set the tone for the rest of the series and is frequently cited as a low point for the Ultimate line. * **The Death of Doctor Strange:** The sorcerer supreme is killed not in a grand magical duel, but in a brutal, physical manner. Dormammu uses Strange's own enchanted cloak to wrap around his neck and chest, squeezing until his head pops from the pressure. The graphic depiction of this left little to the imagination. * **Wolverine's Final Stand:** In a twisted reversal of their iconic Earth-616 confrontation in `X-Men #25` ("Fatal Attractions"), Magneto doesn't just extract Wolverine's Adamantium; he fully rips it from his bones, leaving a bloody, flesh-and-bone skeleton that quickly dies. This, combined with Magneto then incinerating his flesh, was a definitive and brutal end for the unkillable mutant. * **The Decapitation of Magneto:** The event's climax sees Cyclops, a character traditionally defined by his moral compass, execute Magneto in cold blood with a sustained, point-blank optic blast that reduces his head to ash. This act demonstrated how the cataclysm had irrevocably broken the heroes. === Aftermath: A Shattered Universe === The conclusion of `Ultimatum` was detailed in a series of `Requiem` one-shots, which served as eulogies for the fallen and set up the new status quo. * **Massive Depopulation:** The world's population was decimated, and the superhero community was gutted. The X-Men and Fantastic Four effectively ceased to exist as teams. * **Anti-Mutant Hysteria:** Following Captain America's public denouncement, anti-mutant sentiment reached an all-time high. Mutants were hunted and killed, and the US government enacted harsh anti-mutant policies, leading directly to the new `Ultimate Comics: X-Men` series. * **The "Ultimate Comics" Relaunch:** As intended, the universe was relaunched. `Ultimate Spider-Man` was retitled, and new series like `Ultimate Comics: Avengers` and `Ultimate Comics: X-Men` were introduced. These books featured a much smaller cast of surviving characters operating in a darker, more dangerous world. * **Legacy of Trauma:** The survivors, particularly Peter Parker, Kitty Pryde, and Captain America, were deeply traumatized. This grief and the changed world would directly influence major future storylines, including "The Death of Spider-Man," where Peter's heroism in a world that feared him became a central theme. ===== Part 4: Key Players and Their Fates ===== `Ultimatum` is defined less by its plot and more by what it did to its characters. The event served as a final, brutal chapter for many of the Ultimate Universe's founding heroes and villains. ==== The Antagonist: Magneto's Final War ==== Unlike his complex, often sympathetic Earth-616 counterpart, the Ultimate version of Magneto was a far more straightforward terrorist and mutant supremacist. In `Ultimatum`, his grief over the deaths of his children, Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch, pushed him completely over the edge. Stripped of any nuance, he became a genocidal monster whose sole motivation was to punish the world. His actions—reversing the Earth's poles, flooding cities, and personally murdering his old friend Charles Xavier—were those of a villain beyond redemption. His death at the hands of Cyclops was portrayed not as a tragedy, but as a necessary execution. ==== The Victims: A Roster of the Fallen ==== The death toll of `Ultimatum` is staggering. It remains one of the bloodiest events in Marvel history. Many popular character searches revolve around "who died in Ultimatum," making a comprehensive list essential. ^ **Character** ^ **Affiliation** ^ **Cause of Death** ^ **Issue** ^ | Angel | X-Men | Killed by Sabretooth and Sinister's forces. | `Ultimate X-Men #100` | | Beast | X-Men | Drowned in the Ultimatum Wave. | `Ultimatum #1` | | Blob | Brotherhood | Head bitten off by a giant-sized Hank Pym. | `Ultimatum #2` | | Cannonball | X-Men | Killed in an explosion caused by Multiple Man. | `Ultimatum #3` | | Captain Britain | Excalibur | Killed in an explosion at the London Parliament. | `Ultimate X-Men #99` | | Cyclops | X-Men | Shot in the head by Quicksilver after killing Magneto.((While he appeared to die in issue #4, he survived long enough to kill Magneto in #5 before being assassinated.)) | `Ultimatum #5` | | Daredevil | Defenders | Drowned in the Ultimatum Wave, found by Spider-Man. | `Ultimate Spider-Man #131` | | Dazzler | X-Men | Drowned in the Ultimatum Wave. | `Ultimatum #1` | | Doctor Strange | Defenders | Head exploded by Dormammu. | `Ultimatum #3` | | Forge | X-Men | Impaled by a Sentinel controlled by William Stryker. | `Ultimate X-Men #100` | | Franklin Storm | Baxter Building | Drowned in the Ultimatum Wave. | `Ultimate Fantastic Four #58` | | Giant-Man (Hank Pym) | Ultimates | Sacrificed himself in a suicide bombing attack. | `Ultimatum #3` | | Juggernaut | X-Men | Shot with a poison dart by William Stryker's militia. | `Ultimate X-Men #100` | | Longshot | X-Men | Killed by Sabretooth. | `Ultimate X-Men #100` | | Lorelei | Brotherhood | Killed by William Stryker. | `Ultimate X-Men #99` | | Magneto | Brotherhood | Head vaporized by Cyclops. | `Ultimatum #5` | | Nightcrawler | X-Men | Drowned in the Ultimatum Wave. | `Ultimate Spider-Man #132` | | Professor X | X-Men | Neck snapped by Magneto. | `Ultimatum #3` | | Psylocke | X-Men | Stabbed by Wolverine in a mind-controlled rage. | `Ultimate X-Men #100` | | Thor | Ultimates | Sacrificed his life in Valhalla to save Valkyrie. | `Ultimatum #3` | | Toad | Brotherhood | Killed by William Stryker's forces. | `Ultimate X-Men #100` | | Wasp (Janet van Dyne) | Ultimates | Drowned and partially eaten by the Blob. | `Ultimatum #2` | | Wolverine | X-Men | Adamantium skeleton ripped out by Magneto. | `Ultimatum #4` | ==== The Survivors: The Burden of Legacy ==== The few heroes who survived `Ultimatum` were left to pick up the pieces of their shattered world. * **Spider-Man (Peter Parker):** Peter endured the wave and spent the event trying to save as many civilians as he could, witnessing firsthand the failure of the world's greatest heroes. The loss of many of his friends and allies, and the subsequent rise in anti-superhuman sentiment, deeply affected him and set the stage for his eventual death fighting the Green Goblin. * **Captain America (Steve Rogers):** Having lost his friends Thor and the Wasp, a disillusioned Captain America made a public speech blaming Magneto, and by extension all mutants, for the disaster. This act of painting an entire people with one brush was a significant, dark turn for the character and directly fueled the anti-mutant pogroms that followed. * **Kitty Pryde & The Human Torch:** With the X-Men and Fantastic Four destroyed, these two young heroes found themselves adrift. Kitty became a leader for the few surviving mutants, while Johnny Storm had to cope with the loss of his father. Their shared grief would bring them closer in the post-`Ultimatum` era. ===== Part 5: Critical Reception and Legacy ===== Unlike many comic events that receive mixed reviews, `Ultimatum` was met with near-universal condemnation from both professional critics and the long-time readership of the Ultimate line. ==== The Backlash: Fan and Critical Condemnation ==== The criticism leveled against `Ultimatum` was fierce and focused on several key areas: * **Gratuitous "Shock Value" Violence:** Critics and fans felt the graphic deaths (Wasp's cannibalism, Doctor Strange's exploding head) served no narrative purpose beyond being shocking. It was seen as nihilistic and mean-spirited rather than dramatic or impactful. * **Character Assassination:** Many characters acted in ways that felt inconsistent with their established personalities. Captain America's anti-mutant speech and Cyclops's cold-blooded execution of Magneto were seen as betrayals of the core of those characters, even within the grittier Ultimate context. * **Inconsistent Plotting:** The core plot was often criticized as thin and disjointed, serving mainly as a delivery system for a series of gruesome death scenes. The reveal of Doctor Doom as the true mastermind was also seen as a confusing and unnecessary last-minute twist. * **Damage to the Brand:** The Ultimate line was originally conceived as an accessible, modern entry point for new readers. `Ultimatum` did the opposite, creating a continuity so dark and depressing that it became unappealing to many, effectively poisoning the well for the very audience it was meant to attract. ==== The Intended Goal vs. The Reality ==== Marvel's stated goal was to use `Ultimatum` as a "spring cleaning" to revitalize the line. By killing off dozens of characters, they intended to raise the stakes and clear the way for new stories unburdened by years of continuity. The reality, however, was that the event alienated a significant portion of its dedicated fanbase. Instead of a bold new era, the post-`Ultimatum` landscape was seen as a bleak and diminished version of what came before. While some of the relaunched titles, particularly `Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man`, were well-received, the Ultimate brand as a whole never fully recovered from the reputational damage inflicted by `Ultimatum`. ==== Lasting Impact on the Ultimate Universe ==== `Ultimatum` is the definitive "point of no return" for Earth-1610. Every major story that followed was a direct consequence of its devastation. It created the anti-mutant world that defined the subsequent X-Men stories, it informed the grief-stricken journey of Peter Parker, and it established the grim tone that would persist until the universe's final destruction during the [[secret_wars_2015|Secret Wars (2015)]] event, where Earth-1610 collided with Earth-616 and was destroyed. ===== Part 6: Comparative Analysis: Ultimatum in Context ===== `Ultimatum`'s place in the broader Marvel multiverse is that of a cautionary tale, often contrasted with more successful universe-altering events. === Versus Earth-616 Cataclysms (e.g., House of M, Annihilation) === When compared to major Earth-616 events, the differences in storytelling philosophy become clear. * **[[house_of_m|House of M]]:** This event also drastically altered the mutant population with the "No More Mutants" declaration. However, the focus was on the psychological and emotional tragedy of the Scarlet Witch, and the fallout was explored through the lens of loss and survival, not just physical carnage. * **[[annihilation|Annihilation]]:** A cosmic epic with a massive death toll, `Annihilation` was praised for its tight plotting, heroic character arcs (especially for Nova), and sense of grandeur. The deaths felt earned and served to heighten the stakes of a well-told war story, whereas the deaths in `Ultimatum` often felt random and nihilistic. `Ultimatum`'s approach was fundamentally different. It prioritized the spectacle of death over the emotional and narrative weight of it, a choice that ultimately defined its negative legacy. === Ultimatum's Influence (or Lack Thereof) on the MCU === The Marvel Cinematic Universe has drawn significant inspiration from the Ultimate Universe, including Samuel L. Jackson's portrayal of [[nick_fury|Nick Fury]], the design of the Helicarrier, and Hawkeye's family life. However, the MCU has **pointedly and deliberately avoided** the tone and storytelling of `Ultimatum`. The MCU's success is built on a foundation of heroic optimism, character-driven drama, and consequences that, while significant (e.g., "The Snap" in `Avengers: Infinity War`), are ultimately part of a hopeful narrative arc. `Ultimatum` represents the antithesis of this philosophy. Its relentless bleakness, graphic violence, and character assassinations are precisely the elements that would alienate the MCU's global, family-friendly audience. Therefore, while elements of the Ultimate Universe will continue to influence the MCU, `Ultimatum` itself will almost certainly remain exclusively on the comic book page, a stark example of a universe's self-destruction. ===== See Also ===== * [[ultimate_marvel]] * [[magneto]] * [[ultimates]] * [[jeph_loeb]] * [[secret_wars_2015]] * [[earth-1610]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((`Ultimatum` was a commercial success at the time, with its issues frequently placing in the top 10 of monthly sales charts. This success was largely driven by the controversial promise of major character deaths.)) ((Writer Jeph Loeb defended the story's violent tone by stating, "The story is called `Ultimatum` and the stakes have to be real... For better or for worse, we're not fooling around on this one." This indicates the "shock value" was an intentional creative choice.)) ((A significant continuity error exists regarding Doctor Doom. At the end of `Ultimatum #5`, the Thing crushes his head. However, Doom was previously shown to be the one who had Reed Richards' mother killed, and Reed retaliated by trapping Doom in the Zombieverse in `Ultimate Fantastic Four #32`. The Doom in `Ultimatum` was later retconned to be Mary Storm, Sue and Johnny's mother, who had been working for the real Doctor Doom. This retcon is widely considered confusing and poorly executed.)) ((The infamous scene of the Blob eating the Wasp was drawn by David Finch. In interviews, Finch has mentioned that the script was very specific about the horror of the scene and that his job was to render it as effectively as possible.)) ((The final page of `Ultimatum #5` shows a resurrected Reed Richards, now a villain, setting the stage for his new role in the "Ultimate Comics: Doomsday" trilogy. This heel turn was one of the few long-term plot points to successfully emerge from the event.))