The concept of the Many-Angled Ones was crafted by the writing duo Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, affectionately known by fans as “DnA”. They were the architects of Marvel's cosmic renaissance in the late 2000s, revitalizing characters like the Guardians of the Galaxy and Nova. The Many-Angled Ones were conceived as the ultimate antagonists for the cosmic saga that began with Annihilation and culminated in The Thanos Imperative. Their introduction was a gradual build-up, creating a sense of growing, unknowable dread. They were first mentioned by name in Guardians of the Galaxy (vol. 2) #17 (October 2009). Their nature and the horrifying reality they ruled, the Cancerverse, were slowly unveiled throughout the Realm of Kings storyline (2009-2010). Their full, terrifying debut as the main antagonists occurred in the epic 2010 miniseries, The Thanos Imperative. The creation of the Many-Angled Ones draws heavily from the cosmic horror fiction of H.P. Lovecraft. Their name itself is a likely reference to Lovecraftian concepts of non-Euclidean geometry and beings that exist in the “angles” of reality. Their nature as ancient, god-like abominations from beyond normal space, served by fanatical cultists, directly mirrors the Cthulhu Mythos. This creative choice elevated them beyond typical comic book villains into a more primal, existential threat.
The origin of the Many-Angled Ones is inextricably linked to the damnation of an entire alternate universe, Earth-10011.
The rise of the Many-Angled Ones began not with a conquest, but with a desperate prayer. In the reality designated Earth-10011, the heroic Kree warrior Captain Mar-Vell was dying of cancer, just as his Earth-616 counterpart had. Unlike the prime Mar-Vell, who accepted his fate with dignity in the seminal graphic novel The Death of Captain Marvel, this version refused to succumb. In his final, desperate moments, he made a Faustian bargain with the dark powers that lurked in the spaces between realities: the Many-Angled Ones. In exchange for his life and the “cure” for death itself, Mar-Vell agreed to become their avatar. He performed a dark ceremony known as the Ritual of the Necropsy. This blasphemous rite targeted and successfully murdered his universe's incarnation of the abstract entity, Mistress Death. With the fundamental force of entropy and finality erased, the universe was fundamentally broken. Life, without end, became a curse. It grew unchecked, like a cosmic cancer, twisting and corrupting everything it touched. Immortality was not a gift but an eternal torment of grotesque transformation and undeath. This universe was reborn as the Cancerverse. The Many-Angled Ones, ancient beings such as the demonic Shuma-Gorath, became the new gods of this reality. They were worshipped as the bringers of “true life,” a life without the “flaw” of death. Their new avatar, the corrupted and fanatically zealous Lord Mar-Vell, led this new “Church of Un-Death” and prepared to spread their cancerous gospel to other, “dying” realities. Their first target, after discovering a gateway, was the prime universe, Earth-616.
To date, the Many-Angled Ones and the Cancerverse do not exist and have not been mentioned in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. They remain a comic-exclusive concept. However, the MCU has explored themes and entities that are conceptually similar, providing fertile ground for their potential future adaptation. The most direct parallel is Dormammu's Dark Dimension, as seen in Doctor Strange (2016). Like the Cancerverse, the Dark Dimension is an alternate reality with fundamentally different physical laws, ruled by a powerful, malevolent entity. Dormammu's goal is to absorb Earth into his dimension, granting its inhabitants eternal life but stripping them of their individuality and subjecting them to his will—a clear echo of the Many-Angled Ones' twisted gift of immortality. Another point of comparison lies in the introduction of eldritch magic and Elder Gods. WandaVision and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness introduced the Darkhold and its creator, the demon Chthon. Chthon is an ancient, powerful being trapped in another dimension who seeks to influence and enter the prime reality through magical means, corrupting those who use his power. This mirrors the corrupting influence the Many-Angled Ones have on their followers. Furthermore, the creature Wanda Maximoff summons in Multiverse of Madness, named Gargantos, is a clear visual homage to Shuma-Gorath, one of the most prominent Many-Angled Ones. While the name was changed for legal reasons, the appearance of a giant, one-eyed, tentacled monster from another dimension signals the MCU's willingness to embrace the cosmic horror aesthetic that defines the Many-Angled Ones. A future MCU saga, particularly one dealing with multiversal incursions or the fallout from the collapse of realities, could easily introduce the Cancerverse as a universe that “won” its incursion by eliminating Death, positioning the Many-Angled Ones as a terrifying, post-Kang level threat.
The Many-Angled Ones are not a traditional species or organization but a fundamental force of corrupt, eternal life.
The core philosophy of the Many-Angled Ones is that death is a universal flaw, a disease to be cured. They offer “life eternal,” but it is a cancerous, metastatic existence devoid of meaning, change, or peace. Theirs is a universe of endless, agonizing sensation where nothing is allowed the mercy of an end.
The Cancerverse is the physical manifestation of their power and philosophy. It is a universe in perpetual, agonizing undeath.
The Many-Angled Ones are a multiversal-level threat, capable of conquering and converting entire realities. Their power is vast and defies easy categorization.
As they have not appeared, their specific attributes in the MCU are purely speculative. However, drawing from existing conceptual parallels, we can theorize how they might be adapted.
If introduced, the MCU's Many-Angled Ones would likely be presented as a threat originating from outside the known multiverse, possibly from a reality destroyed by an incursion.
The Many-Angled Ones do not form alliances in the traditional sense; they corrupt and absorb. Their “allies” are more accurately described as extensions of their will.
This storyline served as the direct prequel to the main invasion. At the climax of the War of Kings event, a massive bomb detonated, tearing a wound in the fabric of spacetime known as The Fault. The Fault acted as a gateway to another reality. Initial probes sent by various cosmic factions like the Kree, Shi'ar, and Nova Corps returned with horrifying reports of a universe teeming with monstrous, undying life. This was Earth-616's first glimpse into the Cancerverse. Realm of Kings masterfully built a sense of cosmic dread, slowly revealing the nature of this aggressive, hostile universe and its fanatical devotion to “life,” setting the stage for the inevitable invasion.
This is the quintessential Many-Angled Ones storyline. The forces of the Cancerverse, led by a triumphant Lord Mar-Vell, pour through The Fault in a full-scale invasion of the Marvel Universe. Their goal: to capture Thanos and use him as a sacrifice to kill Earth-616's Death. The heroes of the cosmos, including the Guardians of the Galaxy, the Nova Corps, and the empires of the Kree and Shi'ar, form a desperate alliance. Recognizing the unique threat, they are forced to resurrect their nemesis, Thanos, to fight on their side. The storyline is a brutal, high-stakes cosmic war. The heroes' greatest challenge is the fact that their enemy cannot be killed by conventional means. The climax sees Star-Lord's team venture into the Cancerverse on a suicide mission to find a way to reintroduce Death to that reality. They succeed by tricking Lord Mar-Vell into wounding Thanos, which summons Mistress Death herself. Her mere presence causes the Cancerverse to begin to collapse as the concept of an ending is violently reintroduced. To ensure Thanos, now on a rampage of destruction, cannot escape, Star-Lord and Nova tackle him and hold him in the collapsing reality, seemingly sacrificing their lives to save their universe.
While not a direct storyline about the Many-Angled Ones, a tie-in issue in the Guardians of the Galaxy series during the Original Sin event revealed the aftermath of The Thanos Imperative. It was shown that Star-Lord, Nova, and Drax the Destroyer had not died in the Cancerverse's collapse. They had been trapped there for a time, fighting off the surviving forces and the lingering influence of the Many-Angled Ones. This story established that the Cancerverse, though critically damaged, still existed as a pocket dimension and that the threat of the Many-Angled Ones was not entirely extinguished, leaving the door open for their eventual return.
The most significant “alternate version” related to the Many-Angled Ones is the Cancerverse itself. It serves as a dark mirror to the prime Marvel Universe, answering the question: “What if the heroes won, but at the cost of their very souls?” It showcases corrupted versions of beloved characters, transforming heroic ideals into fanatical dogma. The Revengers—a grotesque mockery of the Avengers—are the most potent example of this, a warning of what happens when life is untethered from the natural order.
Before being identified as one of the Many-Angled Ones, Shuma-Gorath had a long history as a standalone villain in Earth-616, primarily as an adversary of Doctor Strange. He is an ancient, inter-dimensional demon-god who ruled Earth in its prehistoric era before being banished by the sorcerer Sise-Neg. His goals have always been to return to Earth-616 and reclaim it, plunging it into chaos. The retcon that established him as a Many-Angled One brilliantly connected the magical/mystical side of the Marvel Universe with the cosmic/sci-fi side. It suggested that many of Earth's ancient “demons” and “elder gods” were, in fact, members of this singular, cosmic-level threat, expanding the history and scope of both Shuma-Gorath and his newfound brethren.
In Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, America Chavez and Stephen Strange are attacked by a giant, one-eyed, tentacled creature named Gargantos. This creature is a clear stand-in for Shuma-Gorath, with the name changed due to rights issues concerning Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian stories, where the name Shuma-Gorath first appeared. While Gargantos is shown to be a summoned beast under the control of the Scarlet Witch, rather than a cosmic deity in its own right, its appearance represents the MCU's first step toward the specific brand of eldritch horror that the Many-Angled Ones embody. It confirms that such beings exist within the MCU's multiverse and could be a precursor to a more faithful adaptation of Shuma-Gorath and his Cancerverse kin.