Table of Contents

Nexus of All Realities

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

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The concept of the Nexus of All Realities was not introduced as a fully formed idea but rather evolved organically from the surreal and mystical storytelling of the early 1970s. Its first conceptual appearance is directly tied to its most famous guardian. The gateway itself was first depicted in Fear #11 (December 1972), created by writer Steve Gerber and artist Rich Buckler. This issue and the subsequent Man-Thing stories in Fear and his own solo title established a specific patch of the Florida Everglades as a place of profound supernatural importance. Gerber, known for his philosophically rich and reality-bending narratives, used this location as a backdrop for bizarre characters and existential threats. The Nexus was his ultimate plot device, a plausible in-universe explanation for how a character like howard_the_duck could find himself trapped in a “world he never made.” The term “Nexus of All Realities” was explicitly codified in Fear #19 (December 1973), cementing the swamp's status as a multiversal lynchpin. This creation was a hallmark of Marvel's Bronze Age, a period that saw the publisher expanding beyond traditional superheroics into horror, satire, and cosmic philosophy, with the Nexus serving as a perfect crucible for these new genres.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Nexus of All Realities is a complex tapestry woven from magic, science, and cosmic happenstance. Its nature differs significantly between the primary comic continuity and its adaptation in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the Earth-616 continuity, the Nexus is not a singular, constructed artifact but a naturally occurring phenomenon—a cosmic weak point where the M'Kraan Crystal's energy, the very force that binds the multiverse, is exceptionally thin. While other such nexuses exist throughout the cosmos (such as the Pan-Dimensional Hub on the planet X-Factor), the one on Earth is the most well-known and arguably the most significant. Its prime location is a specific, unassuming patch of swamp in the Florida Everglades, near the town of Citrusville. The origins of this specific nexus are ancient and tied to the mystical energies of the Earth itself. For millennia, it remained a place of strange occurrences and local legends, a place where reality felt “thin.” Its modern significance, however, began with biochemist Dr. Theodore “Ted” Sallis. Working in the Everglades, Sallis was attempting to recreate the Super-Soldier Serum that created captain_america. Fearing his research would fall into the hands of the terrorist organization A.I.M. (advanced_idea_mechanics), he injected himself with the only existing sample of his formula and fled. He crashed his car into the swamp, where a unique combination of factors converged: his experimental serum, the strange chemical composition of the swamp water, and, most importantly, the potent, ambient magical energies of the Nexus of All Realities. This trifecta of science, nature, and magic did not kill Sallis but transformed him. He was reborn as the Man-Thing, a shambling, empathic muck-monster. His consciousness was largely obliterated, replaced by a purely instinctual and emotional existence. He became a living extension of the swamp and, by proxy, a guardian of the Nexus. He is drawn to strong emotions, and his most famous ability—“Whatever knows fear burns at the Man-Thing's touch!“—is the Nexus's ultimate defense mechanism. Anyone approaching the gateway with fear, greed, or malice in their heart is perceived as a threat by the Man-Thing and is immolated by his touch, their own terror serving as the fuel. This transformation permanently fused the fates of Ted Sallis and the Nexus, creating a perfect, self-regulating security system for one of the most dangerous places on Earth.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU has taken a far more fragmented and conceptual approach to the Nexus, introducing different facets of the idea across various projects, all converging to build the foundation of its “Multiverse Saga.” Initially, the term appeared as an Easter egg. In Thor: The Dark World (2013), the word “Nexus of All Reality” is seen scrawled on Dr. Erik Selvig's chalkboard amidst his ramblings about the cosmic Convergence. This was the first hint, suggesting a place where dimensions intersect. The concept was significantly expanded in the Disney+ series WandaVision (2021). In a commercial parody within the show, a fictional antidepressant is named “Nexus,” described as a drug that “anchors you back to your reality, or the reality of your choice.” More importantly, the series finale heavily implies that Wanda Maximoff, the scarlet_witch, is a “Nexus Being.” In the comics, Nexus Beings are rare individual entities who are keystones to their respective realities and act as anchors for the multiverse's stability. While the MCU has yet to fully define its version of this, it establishes that a “Nexus” can be a person, not just a place. The most profound redefinition came in Loki (2021). Here, the term “Nexus” was divorced from a location and attached to an event. A “Nexus Event” is any action that causes a being to deviate from their predetermined path on the “Sacred Timeline,” the singular flow of time curated by He Who Remains. Such an event, if left unchecked, could branch off and create a new timeline, threatening He Who Remains' control and potentially leading to a new multiversal war. The time_variance_authority was created specifically to “prune” these Nexus Events and their resulting variants. Finally, Loki Season 2 (2023) brought the concept full circle, revealing a physical manifestation called the Nexus of All Realities. This was not a swamp but the central control interface of the Temporal Loom at the heart of the TVA. It was the point where the raw temporal energy of every single timeline—after the Sacred Timeline's destruction—was woven together. This MCU Nexus was a technological marvel, a place of pure temporal mechanics, which Loki ultimately destroyed and replaced, becoming the living anchor of the multiverse himself. Thus, the MCU's Nexus evolved from an Easter egg, to a being, to an event, and finally to the very heart of its new, untamed multiverse.

Part 3: Composition, Powers & History

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The Nexus on Earth-616 is a place of immense and raw power, a physical gateway with observable properties and a long history of use and abuse.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU's “Nexus” concepts are less about a single location's properties and more about a set of cosmic rules and entities governing the multiverse.

Part 4: Guardians, Inhabitants & Key Figures

Key Guardians

Notable Inhabitants & Visitors

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

Man-Thing: "The Song-Cry of the Living Dead Man!" (Fear #11, 1972)

This storyline is the foundational text for the Nexus. While introducing the Man-Thing's origin, Steve Gerber expertly wove in the concept of the swamp as a place where dimensions bleed together. The story features surreal imagery, existential dread, and the first hints of the swamp's cosmic importance. It established the core relationship: the mindless, empathic monster was created by and bound to protect this gateway to everywhere. It set the tone for all future Nexus stories, blending horror, philosophy, and high-concept cosmic adventure.

Secret Wars (2015)

While the Nexus itself was not the main character, this event was the ultimate expression of its failure. The event depicts the “death” of the multiverse via a series of Incursions, where parallel Earths collide and annihilate each other. This total collapse of reality is the worst-case scenario that guardians of the Nexus strive to prevent. On the resulting patchwork planet of Battleworld, a version of the Man-Thing's swamp existed as a domain, serving as a reminder of the gateway that once connected all the dead realities. The event highlighted the fragility of the multiversal structure that the Nexus represents.

Loki (Disney+ Series, 2021-2023)

This series is the single most important story for understanding the Nexus in the MCU. It completely redefined the concept for a new audience. The first season's central plot revolves around the TVA's mission to hunt down Nexus Events, making the term a core part of the MCU lexicon. The revelation of the Sacred Timeline and He Who Remains provided a compelling, albeit sinister, reason for this crusade. The season finale's cliffhanger, where Sylvie kills He Who Remains and fractures the timeline, is the inciting incident for the entire Multiverse Saga. The second season builds upon this by introducing the physical “Nexus of All Realities” at the core of the TVA's Temporal Loom, and culminates in Loki's ascension to a living, breathing replacement for the entire system—the ultimate guardian for a new, infinite multiverse. The series transformed the Nexus from a magical swamp into the central plot engine of Marvel's grandest narrative arc.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5)

1)
The famous phrase, ”Whatever knows fear burns at the Man-Thing's touch!”, was not just a tagline; it was the literal, in-universe explanation for Man-Thing's primary defensive ability and the core of the Nexus's protection. Source: Fear #11-19.
2)
Steve Gerber and Len Wein were roommates when they were both writing “swamp monster” comics for Marvel (Man-Thing) and DC (Swamp Thing), respectively. The two characters have remarkably similar origins and debuted within a month of each other, though their powers and purpose are quite different. Man-Thing's connection to the Nexus is his key differentiator.
3)
In the comics, the power of the Nexus can be harnessed. The villainous corporation Roxxon once attempted to drill into the Nexus for energy, and the sorcerer Baron Mordo has frequently tried to siphon its power for his own ends. Source: Man-Thing Vol. 2.
4)
The MCU's concept of a “Nexus Being” in WandaVision is a direct pull from the comics. In the 1990s, the cosmic entity known as the Time-Keepers revealed that each reality has a Nexus Being that acts as its anchor and personifies its character. Wanda Maximoff was confirmed to be the Nexus Being of Earth-616. Source: Avengers West Coast #61-62.
5)
The visual design of the branching timelines in Loki is a direct visual representation of the chaos the Nexus of All Realities contains. The final shot of Loki holding the timelines together as a new Yggdrasil, the World Tree, visually cements him as the new living center of the MCU's multiverse.