Table of Contents

The Black Order

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

The event ends with the defeat of the Order: Black Dwarf is killed by Ronan the Accuser, Supergiant is killed by Lockjaw, and Ebony Maw betrays Thanos to mentor Thane, while Corvus and Proxima are defeated by the returned Avengers.

//Black Order// (2018)

This five-issue miniseries by writer Derek Landy gave the team a rare spotlight. Hired by the Grandmaster for a mission, the Black Order is dispatched to a war-torn planet to retrieve a powerful artifact. The story delves into their internal dynamics, highlighting the treacherous relationship between Corvus Glaive and Ebony Maw, and showcasing their sheer brutality when unleashed from Thanos's direct command. It establishes them as more than just minions, but as a deeply dysfunctional and deadly team of cosmic mercenaries.

//Avengers: No Surrender// (2018)

This weekly storyline saw the Black Order resurrected by the cosmic entity known as the Challenger to be his champions in a game against the Grandmaster. The Earth is stolen and becomes the game board. This arc pits the Black Order against a massive, unified roster of Avengers. A key plot point is the severing of Corvus Glaive's connection to his glaive, which leads to his permanent death. It was a major chapter that explored their existence independent of Thanos's shadow.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order

The Black Order serves as the primary antagonists of this 2019 Nintendo Switch video game, with the game itself named after them. Their mission, similar to the MCU, is to collect the Infinity Stones for Thanos. The roster includes all five original comic members: Corvus Glaive, Proxima Midnight, Ebony Maw, Cull Obsidian (using his MCU name but based on the Black Dwarf design), and Supergiant, marking her first major appearance in media outside of comics.

Marvel's Avengers (2020 Video Game)

Corvus Glaive and the Black Order appear as antagonists in the War for Wakanda expansion. In this continuity, they are working for the villain Ulysses Klaw, who has hired them to steal Wakanda's Vibranium. This version portrays Corvus as a cunning but ultimately mercenary force, willing to serve masters other than Thanos.

Animated Series Adaptations

The Black Order has appeared in several animated series, including Avengers Assemble and Guardians of the Galaxy. In these appearances, their roles are generally simplified. They are portrayed as recurring, powerful henchmen for Thanos, often appearing one or two at a time to battle the heroes. Their complex personalities and relationships from the comics are typically streamlined for a younger audience, focusing on their physical threat level.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

3) 4) 5) 6) 7) 8)

1)
Supergiant is a key member of the original comic book team but was completely omitted from the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
2)
The name change from Black Dwarf to Cull Obsidian was likely done to avoid potential negative connotations and to use the more intimidating-sounding group name for an individual.
3)
The concept of an elite group of alien warriors serving a cosmic tyrant is a common trope, and the Black Order is often compared to Darkseid's Female Furies from DC Comics. Jonathan Hickman, however, designed them to feel more like individual “dreadlords” with distinct domains of power.
4)
Supergiant's omission from Avengers: Infinity War was a practical decision by the filmmakers. They felt her mind-control powers were too similar to Ebony Maw's persuasive abilities and would have been redundant in an already crowded film.
5)
In the comics, Corvus Glaive and Proxima Midnight are a married couple, a detail that is only subtly hinted at in the MCU through their coordinated fighting style and partnership.
6)
The name “Cull Obsidian” is the official name for the entire team in the comics, meaning “a selection of the obsidian-dark.” The MCU repurposed this name for the individual character known as Black Dwarf in the comics.
7)
First Appearance: New Avengers Vol. 3 #8 (September 2013). Creators: Jonathan Hickman, Jerome Opeña, Jim Cheung.
8)
Ebony Maw's power set in the comics is purely based on psychological manipulation and persuasion, not telekinesis. The change in the MCU was made to make his threat more visual and immediately cinematic.