The concept of a legion of Kangs first coalesced with the “Council of Cross-Time Kangs” in Avengers #267 (May 1986), created by writer Roger Stern and artist John Buscema. However, the more focused and iconic iteration, the Council of Kangs, made its formal debut in Avengers #292 (October 1988), crafted by the same creative team of Roger Stern and John Buscema. The creation of the Council was a brilliant narrative solution to an emerging problem: Kang's personal history had become incredibly convoluted. With decades of stories featuring Kang as Rama-Tut in ancient Egypt, a 20th-century Scarlet Centurion, the master of time Kang the Conqueror, and the far-future custodian of time Immortus, his timeline was a web of contradictions. Stern and Buscema's creation of the Council embraced this complexity, reframing it as a feature rather than a bug. It established that every Kang encounter could have been with a different variant, each branching off from the core timeline of Nathaniel Richards. This concept not only organized Kang's chaotic backstory but also exponentially increased his threat level. No longer just a single time traveler, he was an infinite legion—a force of nature.
The origin of the Council of Kangs is fundamentally different between the prime comic universe and the MCU, reflecting the distinct ways each medium has chosen to explore the concept of the multiverse and its greatest conqueror.
The genesis of the Earth-616 Council of Kangs lies in the boundless ego and ruthless pragmatism of the so-called Prime Kang of Earth-616. After countless journeys through the timestream, Kang became aware of a dangerous “temporal radiation” that was poisoning him. He discovered its source was the proliferation of his own divergent selves. Every time he made a different choice, a new timeline and a new Kang variant would branch off, creating what he deemed to be an infestation of inferior, redundant versions of himself. To preserve his own existence and consolidate his power, Prime Kang conceived of a radical solution: a systematic purge. He traveled to Limbo, a dimension existing outside of the normal flow of time, and summoned the most powerful and cunning Kang variants he could find. He formed a triumvirate with two other particularly formidable Kangs and established the Council. Their stated mandate was to eliminate weaker or “aberrant” Kangs, thereby streamlining the Kang timeline and strengthening the survivors. In reality, it was a treacherous alliance built on mutual suspicion. Prime Kang intended to be the last one standing, using the Council as a tool to destroy his rivals. The Council's first major recorded action was to sentence a variant Kang to death for the “crime” of falling in love with his timeline's Ravonna Renslayer and abdicating his throne for her, an act of sentiment they deemed a contemptible weakness. This brutal act established the Council's ruthless philosophy: only the most merciless and conquest-driven Kangs were worthy of existence. The Council operates from a citadel in Limbo and utilizes a “chrono-correlation” process to hunt and destroy their counterparts. However, their history is rife with betrayal. The original triumvirate collapsed when Prime Kang discovered the other two were plotting against him, leading to their destruction. The Council has been disbanded and reformed multiple times, always plagued by the fact that its members are, by nature, untrustworthy, ambitious conquerors who see every other member as a rival to be eventually eliminated.
The origin of the Council of Kangs in the MCU is a direct and immediate consequence of the events depicted in the Disney+ series Loki. For eons, a variant known as He Who Remains had controlled the flow of time, isolating a cluster of realities into a single “Sacred Timeline.” He did this to prevent a catastrophic multiversal war that had been waged by his own variants—the Kangs. He created the Time Variance Authority (TVA) to “prune” any timeline that branched from his chosen path, thus preventing any new Kangs from ever coming into existence. In the finale of Loki Season 1, Sylvie Laufeydottir kills He Who Remains. His death shatters the Sacred Timeline, causing the multiverse to branch uncontrollably and chaotically. This single act allowed the infinite number of Kang variants, previously suppressed, to re-emerge and flourish across countless realities. As revealed in a post-credits scene in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, three particularly influential variants—Immortus, Rama-Tut, and a Centurion-like figure—took notice of this new era. They convened the first meeting of the Council of Kangs. This wasn't a small cabal but a vast assembly of thousands, if not millions, of Kangs gathered in a colossal, futuristic coliseum outside of time. Their immediate purpose was to address the death of one of their own: the “Exiled One” (the Kang the Conqueror defeated in the film). This Kang had been banished by the Council for his extremist methods; while they sought to rule their own domains, he sought to incinerate all other timelines. His defeat by mortals—“the Avengers”—was seen as an unacceptable transgression. The Council, under the leadership of Immortus, has now declared war on the heroes of the multiverse, viewing them as a rising threat to their collective dominion. The MCU's Council is, therefore, a direct reaction to the fall of the TVA and a proactive military alliance formed to secure their power in a newly untamed multiverse.
Mandate and Ideology The Council's core philosophy is a form of temporal Darwinism. They believe that only the strongest, most ruthless version of Kang deserves to exist and, ultimately, to rule all of time.
Structure and Hierarchy The Council's structure is a monarchy disguised as an oligarchy, built upon a foundation of inevitable betrayal.
Key Comic Members