Table of Contents

Secret Wars

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

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The name “Secret Wars” refers to two major, distinct comic book events, created three decades apart, each defining its respective era of storytelling. The first, Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars, was a twelve-issue limited series published from 1984 to 1985. Its creation was famously driven by a commercial partnership. Mattel, a major toy manufacturer, had acquired the license to produce Marvel action figures and requested a major crossover event that would feature a wide array of popular heroes and villains in a single story, providing a perfect marketing vehicle for their new toy line. Marvel's then-editor-in-chief, Jim Shooter, conceived of the premise and wrote the entire series, with art primarily by Mike Zeck and Bob Layton. The name itself was reportedly chosen after market research and focus groups indicated that young boys responded positively to the words “secret” and “wars.” Despite its commercial origins, the series was a runaway success, becoming one of the best-selling comics of its time and establishing the blueprint for the annual, universe-spanning “event comic” that is now a staple of the industry. Thirty years later, Marvel published Secret Wars (2015), an eight-issue limited series (with a ninth issue added later) that served as the cataclysmic finale to writer Jonathan Hickman's long-running, intricate storylines in the Avengers and New Avengers titles. Where the original was a simple battle royale, the 2015 version was a dense, metaphysical narrative about the end of everything. Hickman, alongside artist Esad Ribić, had spent years building the concept of “Incursions”—collisions between parallel Earths that resulted in the annihilation of both universes. Secret Wars was the story of the very last Incursion, the death of the multiverse, and what rose from its ashes. It was a critically and commercially successful event that fundamentally reshaped the Marvel Universe for years to come.

In-Universe Origin Story

The in-universe catalyst for each Secret Wars event was profoundly different, reflecting the changing scope and complexity of Marvel's cosmic storytelling.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars (1984) The original event began with sheer, inexplicable power. A mysterious, impossibly powerful cosmic entity, who would later be known as the The Beyonder, observed the Marvel Universe from a realm beyond all known dimensions. Fascinated by the concepts of heroism, villainy, and desire, he constructed a planet from pieces of other worlds, which he named “Battleworld.” He then instantaneously abducted a curated selection of Earth's greatest heroes and most formidable villains, including members of the Avengers, the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, as well as singular figures like Spider-Man and the Hulk. On the other side were villains led by the likes of Doctor Doom, Ultron, Kang the Conqueror, and Galactus. Appearing before them as a blinding light, the Beyonder issued a simple, monumental decree: “I am from beyond! Slay your enemies and all you desire shall be yours! Nothing you dream of is impossible for me to accomplish.” With that, he vanished, leaving the two factions to wage a “secret war” on this alien world. The conflict was not about saving the universe, but about survival and the promise of ultimate power, forcing uneasy alliances and revealing the true nature of many participants. The heroes fought for principle and a way home, while the villains, led by the endlessly ambitious Doctor Doom, saw it as the ultimate opportunity for conquest. Secret Wars (2015) The second Secret Wars was not a contest, but a desperate act of preservation at the end of time. Its origins lie in the multiversal decay chronicled in Jonathan Hickman's Avengers run. A phenomenon known as Incursions began occurring, where two parallel Earths from different universes would appear in each other's skies. If the two Earths collided, both of their respective universes would be annihilated. The only way to prevent this was for one of the Earths to be destroyed. This horrifying reality forced a secret cabal of Earth's smartest heroes, the Illuminati, to make impossible choices, destroying world after world to save their own. They eventually discovered the cause: entities they called the Beyonders (a retcon establishing them as a race, not a single being) were using the Molecule Man of every reality as a bomb to detonate each universe, as a grand experiment. In the final moments before the last Incursion between Earth-616 (the prime universe) and Earth-1610 (the Ultimate universe), Doctor Doom, accompanied by Doctor Strange and the 616-Molecule Man, confronted the Beyonders. Using an intricate plan, Doom managed to absorb their near-infinite power, killing them and seemingly preventing the total annihilation of all existence. However, he was too late to save the multiverse itself. All that remained were fragments of dead realities. With his newfound omnipotence, Doctor Doom salvaged these “domains” and stitched them together into a new, singular planet: a new Battleworld. He became God Emperor Doom, the absolute ruler of this new reality, rewriting history so that he was the all-powerful, all-knowing creator who had saved them all. The few heroes who survived the final Incursion aboard a “life raft” built by Reed Richards emerged into this world eight years later, finding a reality ruled by their greatest enemy, setting the stage for a war to reclaim existence itself.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU has not yet had a Secret Wars event, but it is actively building towards one, which is slated to be the conclusion of the “Multiverse Saga.” The foundational concepts have been carefully laid across multiple films and series. The series Loki was the first to truly break open the multiverse, revealing the existence of infinite timelines and variants. It established that a multiversal war had previously occurred, waged between variants of a single being, Kang the Conqueror. The winner of that war, He Who Remains, created the Time Variance Authority (TVA) to prune all divergent timelines and maintain a single “Sacred Timeline” to prevent another war. The death of He Who Remains at the hands of Sylvie unleashed the multiverse once more, creating the chaotic conditions necessary for a future conflict. Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness directly introduced the concept of Incursions into the MCU, defining them in a manner nearly identical to the comics: a collision between two universes that risks destroying one or both. The film showed the devastating aftermath of an Incursion caused by a variant of Doctor Strange. Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania established Kang the Conqueror and his many variants (organized as the Council of Kangs) as the primary antagonists of the Multiverse Saga. Kang's mastery over time and space, and the sheer threat posed by his infinite versions, positions him as the likely catalyst for the coming multiversal war. It is widely speculated that the MCU's Avengers: Secret Wars will adapt elements from both comic events, potentially featuring Kang in a role analogous to the Beyonder or Doctor Doom, forcing heroes from across the multiverse to fight on a newly-formed Battleworld to determine which reality, if any, will survive.

Part 3: In-Depth Analysis: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath

Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars (1984)

The Premise & Key Turning Points

The 1984 event was a direct, focused conflict driven by character interactions and strategic battles.

The Aftermath

While reality was not rebooted, the consequences of the first Secret Wars were significant and long-lasting:

Secret Wars (2015)

The Premise & Key Turning Points

The 2015 event was a story about the end of a multiverse and the forging of a new one, filled with political intrigue, cosmic horror, and philosophical debate.

The Aftermath

The end of the 2015 Secret Wars resulted in the single greatest restructuring of the Marvel Universe in its history.

Part 4: Key Players & Factions

The Protagonists

The Antagonists

Key Factions

Part 5: Battleworld: The Patchwork Planet

The setting of both events is as iconic as the conflict itself.

Battleworld (1984)

The first Battleworld was a relatively simple creation. The Beyonder used a machine to rip pieces from hundreds of planets, including a suburb of Denver, Colorado, and stitch them into a single, functional world. It had a breathable atmosphere, alien flora, and was dotted with advanced fortresses and technology for the combatants to use. Its geography was straightforward, designed purely as an arena for the war.

Battleworld (2015)

The second Battleworld was infinitely more complex and fascinating. It was the sole planet in a dead cosmos, illuminated by a “sun” that was actually the Human Torch, Johnny Storm, held in perpetual stasis. The planet itself was a patchwork of 41 different domains, each a fragment of a dead alternate reality, fused together by Doom's will. Each domain was ruled by a “Baron” or “Baroness” appointed by and loyal to Doom. The borders between domains were heavily policed, and travel was forbidden. This structure allowed for countless tie-in stories exploring wildly different Marvel realities living side-by-side.

Notable Domains of Battleworld (2015)
Domain Name Baron/Ruler Description
The Shield Nick Fury A massive wall protecting the civilized domains from the horrors to the south. Manned by an army of sentinels and heroes.
Doomstadt God Emperor Doom The capital of Battleworld, located in the center of the continent. The seat of Doom's power.
Westchester Baron Robert Kelly A world where the X-Men's Sentinels program succeeded, forcing mutants to live in hiding.
The Greenlands The Maestro (a tyrannical future Hulk) A desolate wasteland populated by various tribes of gamma-irradiated Hulks.
Marville Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers) A domain populated by heroes from the “House of M” and “Armor Wars” realities, locked in a perpetual war.
Utopolis Baroness Sue Storm (The Invisible Woman) The home of the Future Foundation and Doom's “family” in this reality.
The Deadlands Apocalypse A southern region overrun by zombies from the Marvel Zombies universe.
New Xandar Black Bolt A domain where the Annihilation Wave of Annihilus constantly threatens its borders.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

The “Secret Wars” concept has been revisited and adapted numerous times.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5)

1)
The original 1984 Secret Wars was one of the first major comic book events to be heavily influenced by toy sales, a practice that would become more common in the industry.
2)
The name “The Beyonder” was a creation of Jim Shooter. The character's nature has been retconned multiple times over the years. At one point, he was revealed to be an incomplete Cosmic Cube. Later, he was retconned into being a latent Inhuman-mutant hybrid. The current interpretation, following the 2015 Secret Wars, has largely returned to his original depiction as a near-omnipotent child-like entity from another reality, separate from the race of “Beyonders” who caused the Incursions.
3)
Jonathan Hickman's sprawling narrative that culminates in Secret Wars (2015) is considered one of modern comics' most ambitious storylines. The full story requires reading his runs on Fantastic Four, FF, Avengers, and New Avengers in a specific order to grasp the full scope.
4)
The 2015 Battleworld map, created by Jonathan Hickman and Esad Ribić, is a masterpiece of world-building, filled with dozens of references to beloved Marvel stories like Age of Apocalypse, Marvel 1602, Days of Future Past, and Old Man Logan, essentially giving these fan-favorite alternate realities a “canon” place within the event.
5)
The final line of the 2015 event is “Everything lives,” a direct refutation of the constant refrain of the preceding New Avengers series, which was “Everything dies.” This signaled a shift to a more optimistic and constructive era for the Marvel Universe.