The mantle of Ms. Marvel has a rich and layered history, with two characters defining its legacy decades apart.
The original Ms. Marvel, Carol Danvers, was first introduced as a supporting character, a U.S. Air Force officer, in Marvel Super-Heroes #13 (March 1968), created by writer Roy Thomas and artist Gene Colan. It wasn't until nearly a decade later that she became a superhero. In Ms. Marvel #1 (January 1977), writer Gerry Conway and artist John Buscema reimagined Carol as a superpowered hero. The creation of Ms. Marvel was a direct response to the feminist movement of the 1970s. Her title, using the honorific “Ms.”, was a deliberate political and cultural statement, positioning her as an independent, powerful woman on par with her male counterparts. Her initial series explored themes of identity, career, and equality, making her one of Marvel's premiere female heroes.
Over three decades later, Marvel sought to create a new character that reflected the contemporary world. The idea for a new Ms. Marvel, a young Muslim-American girl, was conceived during a conversation between Marvel editors Sana Amanat and Stephen Wacker. They brought in writer G. Willow Wilson, a novelist and comic book writer known for her nuanced explorations of faith and identity, and artist Adrian Alphona, co-creator of the Runaways. Kamala Khan was first teased with a cameo in Captain Marvel #14 (August 2013) before making her full debut and claiming the mantle in All-New Marvel NOW! Point One #1 (January 2014). Her solo series, Ms. Marvel, launched in February 2014 to widespread critical acclaim and commercial success. Kamala's creation was praised for its authentic voice, heartfelt storytelling, and groundbreaking representation, quickly establishing her as one of Marvel's most popular new characters of the 21st century.
The in-universe origins of how Kamala Khan gained her powers represent one of the starkest and most important distinctions between the prime comic universe and the cinematic universe.
Kamala Khan's origin is intrinsically linked to the Inhumans and the actions of their king, Black Bolt. During the Infinity storyline, Black Bolt detonates a Terrigen Bomb over New York City, releasing the transformative Terrigen Mists across the globe. These mists travel far and wide, activating the latent Inhuman genes (or “NuHumans”) in thousands of unsuspecting individuals.
At this time, Kamala Khan is a typical teenager in Jersey City, New Jersey. She is an avid fan of superheroes, particularly the Avengers and her personal hero, Carol Danvers, who by this point has taken the name Captain Marvel. Feeling constrained by her protective parents and struggling to fit in at school, Kamala sneaks out to attend a party against her parents' wishes. The party is a disaster, and as she walks home feeling dejected, the Terrigen Mists roll into Jersey City and envelop her.
Kamala is instantly encased in a transformative cocoon. Inside, she has a feverish vision of her heroes: Captain America, Iron Man, and Captain Marvel. They question what she wants in life, and she tearfully confesses her desire to be “less of a weirdo” and more like the beautiful, amazing, and less-complicated Carol Danvers. When the cocoon shatters, her wish has been granted in a terrifyingly literal way: she has been physically transformed into a younger version of Carol Danvers in her classic, black Ms. Marvel costume.
Horrified and disoriented by her new powers of shapeshifting and elasticity, she instinctively saves a classmate from drowning in the river. This first act of heroism, though clumsy, sets her on a new path. After a period of experimentation and gaining control over her “embiggening” abilities, she is inspired by Carol Danvers' own legacy of taking on a predecessor's mantle (Captain Mar-Vell). With a deep sense of responsibility and a desire to protect her city, Kamala Khan creates her own costume and proudly adopts the name Ms. Marvel, not to replace her idol, but to honor her. Her powers are definitively Inhuman in this continuity; she is a polymorph whose body has the ability to stretch, deform, shrink, and expand at will.
The Marvel Cinematic Universe (designated as Earth-199999) presents a radically different origin for Kamala Khan, completely severing her ties to the Inhumans and the Terrigen Mists.
In the Disney+ series Ms. Marvel, Kamala is still a superhero-obsessed teenager from Jersey City who idolizes Captain Marvel. Her powers are not latent within her DNA waiting for an external catalyst, but are instead unlocked by an ancient family artifact. She receives a package from her Nani (maternal grandmother) containing a mysterious and ornate bangle. Believing it to be a simple bracelet, she wears it as the final piece of her Captain Marvel cosplay for AvengerCon.
While at the convention, she puts on the bangle, and it immediately activates, unleashing a wave of cosmic energy. Her body begins to glow, and she discovers she can create and manipulate a purple, crystalline energy, which she refers to as “hard light”. She uses this newfound ability to save her classmate Zoe Zimmer from a falling prop, an event that is captured on video and quickly goes viral, dubbing her the mysterious “Night Light”.
Her journey becomes one of discovery, not just of her powers, but of her family's hidden history. The bangle is revealed to be of extra-dimensional origin, and it connects her to her great-grandmother, Aisha, a member of a group of exiled beings known as the Clandestines from the Noor Dimension. The Clandestines, also called djinn, believe the bangle is the key to their return home, and they hunt Kamala for it. Kamala learns to control her hard-light powers, using them to create platforms, shields, and most iconically, to form a giant, glowing fist around her own—a visual homage to her comic book “embiggening” power.
The most significant change is revealed in the series finale. Her brilliant friend, Bruno Carrelli, who has been studying her genetics, tells her that while the bangle unlocked her potential, there is something different about her genes compared to her family. He describes it as a “mutation.” As he says the word, the theme from X-Men: The Animated Series briefly plays, confirming that in the MCU, Kamala Khan is a mutant. This adaptation was a deliberate choice by Marvel Studios to align her origin with the MCU's burgeoning introduction of mutants and the X-Men, a stark departure from her well-established Inhuman roots in the comics.
Kamala Khan's Inhuman physiology grants her a unique set of abilities centered around morphogenetics, the ability to alter her physical form.
The MCU version of Ms. Marvel retains the spirit of the character but with a completely different powerset, visually and thematically.
The Marvels, the bangle is revealed to be a “Quantum Band,” an ancient and powerful artifact that, when paired with another, can manipulate space and time.Civil War II when they find themselves on opposite sides of an ideological conflict, a rift that deeply wounds Kamala but ultimately helps her forge her own identity as a hero. In the MCU, their relationship is central to the film The Marvels, where a cosmic entanglement causes them to swap places every time they use their light-based powers, forcing them to work together and form a team.Outlawed, the U.S. government passes “Kamala's Law,” which bans superhero activity by anyone under the age of 21. The law is enforced by the Child-Hero Reconnaissance and Disruption Law Enforcement division (C.R.A.D.L.E.), led by the ruthless agent Lockdown. They become a persistent institutional threat, hunting Kamala and her fellow young heroes, forcing them to operate as fugitives.Civil War II, Kamala quits the Avengers. She co-founds the Champions with Miles Morales (Spider-Man) and Sam Alexander (Nova). Their mission statement is to “change the world” through more positive, grassroots heroism, focusing on helping ordinary people rather than just fighting supervillains. She is often the heart and moral leader of the team.This is Kamala Khan's foundational origin story. It establishes her entire world: her family life, her friendships with Bruno and Nakia, her fandom, and her feelings of being an outsider. The arc covers her exposure to the Terrigen Mists, her first confusing transformations, and her decision to take up the Ms. Marvel mantle. Her first major challenge is facing the Inventor and his scheme to use teenagers as living batteries. The storyline is celebrated for its perfect blend of superhero action and a heartfelt coming-of-age narrative, exploring themes of identity, gentrification, and generational divides. It defines her as a hero who fights not for the world, but for her world: Jersey City.
This major crossover event forces Kamala into a brutal ideological conflict with her idol, Carol Danvers. The conflict revolves around Ulysses, an Inhuman who can predict future crimes. Captain Marvel leads the faction that advocates for “predictive justice”—stopping crimes before they happen—while Iron Man argues that punishment cannot precede the crime. Initially, Kamala sides with her hero, but she becomes horrified when the predictive justice program leads to the profiling and arrest of innocent people in her community. The breaking point comes when Miles Morales is predicted to kill Captain America. Kamala defies Carol to protect her friend, shattering their mentor-protégé relationship. This event is a critical turning point for Kamala, causing her to lose faith in her heroes and inspiring her to form the Champions to pursue a better way of heroism.
This event begins when a battle between the Champions and a dragon goes horribly wrong, resulting in the destruction of a school and the apparent death of Ms. Marvel (she is severely injured but survives). The tragedy leads to public outcry and the passage of “Kamala's Law,” making underage superheroics illegal. This legislation turns Kamala and every young hero in the country into criminals. The storyline forces Kamala to question the very nature of her mission. She is torn between obeying the law and her innate drive to help people. The event disbands the Champions and forces them underground, fundamentally altering the landscape for Marvel's teenage heroes and placing Ms. Marvel at the center of a nationwide debate about freedom and responsibility.
Secret Wars (2015) event. She is seen as a member of the Avengers alongside Miles Morales before their reality is destroyed.Marvel's Avengers. Her origin is a faithful adaptation of her comic book Inhuman story. She is exposed to Terrigen Mist during the “A-Day” disaster and gains her polymorphic powers. The story follows her journey as she seeks to reassemble the disbanded Avengers and expose the crimes of the corporation A.I.M. This portrayal brought the character to a massive new audience before her MCU debut.Dark Reign storyline, Norman Osborn formed his own team of Dark Avengers, consisting of villains posing as heroes. The role of Ms. Marvel was taken by the supervillain Moonstone (Dr. Karla Sofen), who wore Carol Danvers' classic black costume. She was a cruel and manipulative version of the hero, using the public's trust for her own gain.Ms. Marvel (2014) #1, Kamala's first line of dialogue is her smelling “the delicious smell of embiggened bacon.” The word “embiggen” was originally a joke word from the TV show The Simpsons, which has since been adopted into official dictionaries. Its use here perfectly captures Kamala's nerdy, pop-culture-infused personality.Ms. Marvel (2014) #1-19 by G. Willow Wilson & Adrian Alphona; All-New, All-Different Avengers (2015); Civil War II (2016); Champions (2016) by Mark Waid & Humberto Ramos; The Magnificent Ms. Marvel (2019) by Saladin Ahmed & Minkyu Jung.