Table of Contents

Beyonders

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The concept of the Beyonders has undergone one of the most significant evolutions in Marvel's cosmic lore, beginning with a singular entity and expanding into a multiversal threat. The original Beyonder first made his presence known, though he was not seen, in Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars #1 (May 1984). Created by then-Editor-in-Chief Jim Shooter and artist Mike Zeck, this being was conceived as the ultimate “what if?”—an entity of limitless power observing humanity's capacity for good and evil. The first Secret Wars was a landmark event, not only for its universe-altering implications but also as one of the first major toy-line tie-in comic events. The Beyonder was the perfect narrative device to orchestrate this massive crossover, a being powerful enough to believably kidnap Earth's most powerful heroes and villains. His childlike curiosity and detachment made him a unique and memorable antagonist. He returned in the sequel, Secret Wars II (1985-1986), also penned by Shooter. This series brought the Beyonder to Earth in a physical form, where he attempted to understand human concepts like love, desire, and mortality, causing chaos with his naive-yet-godlike powers. This storyline was far more divisive among readers, with some finding his philosophical journey compelling and others viewing the character as overly powerful and narratively clumsy. For decades, the Beyonder's origin was retconned several times, with writers attempting to fit his immense power into the established cosmic hierarchy. He was explained away as a sentient Cosmic Cube, an Inhuman-Mutant hybrid, and other concepts. However, it was writer Jonathan Hickman who provided the definitive modern origin during his multi-year run on Avengers and New Avengers. Beginning in 2013, Hickman began seeding a storyline about the death of the Multiverse. He reintroduced the “Beyonders” not as a single being, but as the entire race from which the original hailed. These new Beyonders were cold, clinical, and utterly terrifying—the “Ivory Kings” responsible for the universal Incursions. This culminated in the 2015 Secret Wars event, which canonized them as the greatest threat the Multiverse had ever known, completely supplanting the original character's persona with a far more alien and horrifying concept.

In-Universe Origin Story

The in-universe history of the Beyonders is split between the initial stories featuring a single entity and the modern understanding of them as a race. It is critical to differentiate these two versions, as they are effectively different concepts that share a name.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The Original Beyonder (Pre-Hickman Era) The first being known as the Beyonder hailed from a realm completely separate from and infinitely larger than the known Marvel Multiverse. This “Beyond-Realm” was, in essence, everything. The Beyonder was its sum total. Through a microscopic pinhole created by a lab accident involving Owen Reece (Molecule Man), the Beyonder became aware of the Marvel Multiverse. To him, this complex tapestry of infinite universes was a tiny, fascinating curio. Driven by a profound curiosity about the nature of desire—a concept that did not exist in his perfect, complete reality—he created a planet called “Battleworld” from pieces of various worlds. He then abducted a large group of Earth's most prominent superheroes and supervillains and commanded them: “Slay your enemies and all that you desire shall be yours!”. This conflict, known as the first Secret Wars, was his grand experiment. He observed beings like Doctor Doom, who managed to briefly steal his power, and Captain America, who exemplified unwavering heroism, trying to comprehend their motivations. A year later, he traveled to Earth in Secret Wars II. Creating a physical body for himself (initially a composite of various heroes, later settling on a form resembling Captain America's), he attempted to live as a mortal to understand the human experience. His journey was a chaotic disaster. He became a professional wrestler, turned a skyscraper into gold, and nearly erased death from the universe, all in a clumsy attempt to find fulfillment. He was ultimately a lonely, confused god-child with the power to unmake reality at a whim. The heroes of the universe, with the help of the Molecule Man, eventually forced him into a machine that would have made him mortal. He instead chose to expend his energy to evolve into a new form of life, a sentient universe that would experience existence from beginning to end. This new being was later known as Kosmos. The Beyonders (Modern Hickman-Era Retcon) Jonathan Hickman's run provided a new, more terrifying origin that subsumed all previous versions. In this telling, the Beyonders are a race of beings from a higher dimension existing outside the Multiverse and its temporal flow. They are “linear” beings; they do not experience time as mortals do. From their perspective, the Multiverse is a self-contained petri dish, an experiment they created eons ago. Their greatest creations were the Cosmic Cubes—devices of immense reality-warping power that they seeded in nearly every universe. These Cubes were, in fact, infant versions of their own kind, designed to mature by absorbing the ambient desires of the universe's inhabitants. The original “Beyonder” from Secret Wars and Secret Wars II was re-contextualized as one such “child unit,” an immature and unstable being. The Beyonders observed their experiment for billions of years. At some point, they concluded that the Multiverse was a failure. They decided to terminate the project. To do this, they used a failsafe they had built into creation itself: the Molecule Man. It was revealed that Owen Reece was not a random accident; the Beyonders had designed a Molecule Man for every universe, each one engineered to be a living bomb with the power to destroy its native reality upon death. The Beyonders then began their multiversal demolition. They sent a Molecule Man from one universe crashing into another, triggering an “Incursion” that would destroy both. This process was repeated across the Multiverse, a systematic extermination that caused the collapse of thousands of universes. To ensure no one could stop them, they first assassinated the ultimate multiversal guardian, the Living Tribunal, along with all the Celestials and other cosmic abstract entities. Their plan was absolute and nearly flawless, thwarted only by the desperate, universe-hopping quest of a re-powered Doctor Doom.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

To date, the Beyonders have not been introduced, named, or alluded to in any form within the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). Their role as the architects of Secret Wars is one of the biggest questions facing the MCU's Multiverse Saga. While they do not exist in the canon, we can speculate on their potential adaptation. The MCU is currently building towards its own version of Secret Wars. The role of the Beyonders as the ultimate cause of this multiversal collapse could be filled by several potential characters or concepts:

Adapting the Beyonders directly from the comics presents a major challenge. Their power level—killing the Living Tribunal with ease—is so immense that it can be difficult to create believable stakes for a film audience. A cinematic version would likely need to be “nerfed” or re-contextualized to be a more tangible threat that heroes like the Avengers could conceivably fight.

Part 3: In-Depth Analysis: Powers, Nature & Purpose

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Powers & Abilities The power of the Beyonders is, for all practical purposes, absolute. It is best understood by separating the original entity from the modern race.

Nature & Purpose

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

As the Beyonders do not exist in the MCU, we analyze the thematic and power vacuum they represent. Potential Power Level If introduced, the Beyonders would need to represent a threat level beyond anything seen before, including Thanos with the Infinity Gauntlet.

Potential Nature & Purpose

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

The Beyonders do not have allies or friends. They have tools, obstacles, and enemies. Their interactions are defined by their overwhelming power and singular focus.

Core Adversaries & Pawns

Cosmic Victims

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

Secret Wars (1984)

Secret Wars II (1986)

Time Runs Out & Secret Wars (2015)

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6)

1)
The original Beyonder's appearance in Secret Wars II, with his dark, curly hair and 1980s attire, was seen by some critics as a self-insert for the writer, Jim Shooter.
2)
The name “Ivory Kings,” used to refer to the Beyonders in Hickman's run, was a title given to them by the Black Swans, a cult-like group that worshipped Rabum Alal.
3)
The concept of a “linear-verse” is a key to understanding the modern Beyonders. Because they exist outside of time, they perceive a being's entire existence—past, present, and future—as a single, static object. This is why they were unable to anticipate Doctor Doom's plan, which was assembled across multiple points in time.
4)
Key Reading - First Beyonder: Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars #1-12 (1984-1985), Secret Wars II #1-9 (1985-1986).
5)
Key Reading - Modern Beyonders: New Avengers (Vol. 3) #1-33 (2013-2015), Secret Wars (2015) #1-9. The critical moment of the Living Tribunal's death occurs in New Avengers (Vol. 3) #30.
6)
The destruction of the Beyonders was not achieved through a direct fight. Doctor Doom used thousands of Molecule Men as a conduit to absorb their power, effectively turning their own weapon against them.