Table of Contents

Siege

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

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

Siege was a four-issue core miniseries, accompanied by a one-shot epilogue titled Siege: The Cabal, and numerous tie-in issues across the Marvel Comics line. It was published from January to May 2010. The event was the culmination of a long-form narrative meticulously crafted by writer Brian Michael Bendis, who had been the chief architect of Marvel's event cycle for nearly a decade, starting with avengers_disassembled. The creative team for the core miniseries was a powerhouse pairing:

Bendis envisioned Siege as the definitive end to the dark and cynical era that began with Civil War and intensified during secret_invasion. After the Skrull invasion was thwarted by Norman Osborn, he was hailed as a global hero, leading to his “Dark Reign.” Siege was designed to be the breaking point—the moment Osborn, driven by paranoia and ego, finally overreached in a way the world could not ignore. Olivier Coipel's art was chosen for its epic, cinematic quality, perfectly suited for rendering the clash between gods, monsters, and super-soldiers. The series was a critical and commercial success, praised for its tight pacing, spectacular visuals, and emotionally resonant conclusion to a long-running, complex chapter of Marvel history.

In-Universe Origin Story

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe): The End of a Dark Reign

The road to the Siege of Asgard was paved with manipulation, political power, and Norman Osborn's escalating madness. Following the Skrull invasion, Osborn was handed the keys to the kingdom. He dismantled S.H.I.E.L.D., replaced it with his own organization, H.A.M.M.E.R., and formed a new team of “Avengers” comprised of supervillains disguised as heroes. He ruled through a dark alliance known as the cabal, which included doctor_doom, the_hood, Namor, Emma Frost, and Loki. Throughout the “Dark Reign” storyline, Osborn's grip on power—and his sanity—began to fray. He was haunted by his Green Goblin persona, faced constant challenges from rogue heroes like Clint Barton and the new_avengers, and struggled to control the volatile members of his own team, particularly the godlike but mentally unstable Sentry. The final catalyst was Loki, the God of Mischief. Working behind the scenes, Loki had his own ambitions for Asgard's throne. He saw Osborn as the perfect tool to create chaos. Loki manipulated Osborn into believing that Asgard, which Thor had relocated to float above Broxton, Oklahoma, was a national security threat that needed to be eliminated. To provide Osborn with a casus belli (a justification for war), Loki goaded the Asgardian warrior Volstagg into a confrontation with the U-Foes in Chicago. The resulting battle, which took place in a crowded football stadium, ended in a catastrophic explosion, killing thousands of civilians. Blaming Asgard for the tragedy, Osborn used the incident to rally public opinion and secure presidential authority to act. With his Dark Avengers, The Hood's supervillain army, and legions of H.A.M.M.E.R. agents, Norman Osborn, clad in his iron_patriot armor, launched a full-scale military invasion of the sovereign city-state of Asgard. This was the Siege. His goal was not just conquest; it was the final, definitive act to cement his power and eliminate the last bastion of true heroism that stood in his way.

Thematic Parallels in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

As of now, a direct adaptation of the Siege storyline has not occurred in the MCU. The event's specific circumstances—Asgard on Earth, Norman Osborn in charge of global security—are unique to the comics' “Dark Reign” era. However, the MCU has explored many of the core themes and narrative elements of Siege in different contexts, providing a roadmap for how such a story could be adapted.

In essence, while the MCU has not told the story of Siege, it has laid all the necessary groundwork. The political climate, the existence of a proto-Dark Avengers team, and the presence of New Asgard on Earth create a fertile environment for a future adaptation that would explore the same questions of power, heroism, and the cost of security.

Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath

The Siege event was a tightly focused narrative, primarily taking place over the course of a single, brutal battle. The story can be broken down into three distinct acts: the political machinations leading to the invasion, the cataclysmic battle itself, and the universe-altering fallout.

The Road to Siege: Manipulation and Justification

The conflict began not with a bang, but with a whisper from Loki.

  1. Loki's Gambit: Seeking to sow discord and reclaim Asgard for himself, Loki orchestrates a meeting of the cabal. He proposes an invasion of Asgard, a plan that doctor_doom vehemently rejects, leading to a violent clash between Doom and Osborn's forces. This fractures the Cabal, leaving Osborn more isolated and paranoid.
  2. The “Chicago Incident”: Loki's masterstroke is manipulating Volstagg the Voluminous. He engineers a situation where Volstagg is attacked by the U-Foes. Defending himself, Volstagg is caught in an explosion at Soldier Field, resulting in mass casualties. This manufactured tragedy is all Osborn needs.
  3. Presidential Authority: Osborn presents a doctored version of events to the President of the United States, painting the Asgardians as unstable, dangerous aliens. He receives authorization to neutralize the “threat.”
  4. The War Council: Osborn assembles his key players: the Dark Avengers (including The Sentry, Ares, Moonstone, Bullseye), The Hood's expansive crime syndicate, and his H.A.M.M.E.R. army. He lays out the plan of attack, framing it as a necessary act of national security. Notably, he lies directly to Ares, the God of War, telling him that Zeus has approved the attack on a fellow pantheon—a lie that will have fatal consequences.

The Main Event: The Fall of Asgard

The Siege itself is a swift, brutal, and escalating conflict that draws in nearly every hero in the Marvel Universe.

The Aftermath: The Heroic Age

The end of the Siege marked a profound shift in the status quo of the Marvel Universe.

Part 4: Key Factions and Players

Osborn's Coalition: The Invaders

The forces that laid siege to Asgard were a motley but powerful alliance of government troops, super-criminals, and Osborn's personal enforcers.

The Alliance of Heroes: The Defenders

The defense of Asgard was initially mounted by the Asgardians alone, but they were soon joined by a massive, unified front of Earth's heroes.

Part 5: Key Moments and Defining Battles

The Betrayal and Death of Ares

One of the most shocking and brutal moments of the entire “Dark Reign” saga was the death of Ares. Having been a key member of Osborn's Avengers, Ares fought with the conviction of a soldier serving his country. When he realized that the invasion of Asgard was a dishonorable lie, he immediately turned on Osborn. The confrontation was short and horrific. Before Ares could deliver a fatal blow to the cowering Osborn, the Sentry intervened. With a cold, detached command from Osborn (“Take him out.”), Sentry unleashed his power. The panels drawn by Olivier Coipel depict a terrifying, silent sequence where Sentry effortlessly grabs Ares and, in a splash page of shocking gore, tears him in half vertically. This moment signified that Osborn's forces were beyond reason and that the Sentry was no longer a hero, but an uncontrollable weapon of mass destruction.

The Big Three Reunited

For fans, a central and emotionally powerful moment was the reunion of Captain America, Iron Man, and Thor on the battlefield. The trio had been fractured since the events of Civil War, with Steve Rogers' death (and eventual return), Tony Stark's leadership of the pro-registration side, and Thor's initial anger at Stark for cloning him. During the Siege, as Osborn's forces faltered, Steve Rogers arrived, shield in hand (having reclaimed it from Bucky), rallying the heroes. Moments later, Thor calls down a bolt of lightning to clear a path, and Iron Man lands beside them. For the first time in years, the foundational pillars of the Avengers stood side-by-side, united against a common foe. Steve's simple command, “Avengers Assemble,” marked the official end of their division and the true beginning of the Heroic Age.

The Transformation into the Void

The climax of the event was not the defeat of Norman Osborn, but the final, complete eruption of the Sentry's dark side. Pushed to his absolute limit by the battle and Osborn's final, desperate command to destroy everything, Robert Reynolds' fragile psyche shattered. He was consumed by the Void. The transformation was depicted as a monstrous, shadowy apotheosis, a being of pure darkness with writhing tentacles and a malevolent will. It was no longer a man or a hero; it was a cosmic threat, a “destroyer of worlds.” The Void effortlessly toppled the city of Asgard, turning the tide from a mere battle into an apocalyptic event that required the combined might of every hero and a noble sacrifice to overcome.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

While Siege as a specific event is deeply tied to the Earth-616 continuity of its time, its core concept—a massive assault on Asgard—has appeared in other media.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6)

1)
The Siege event served as a “reset button” for the Marvel Universe, ending the long, dark storyline that had dominated the publisher's comics since 2006's Civil War.
2)
Brian Michael Bendis stated in interviews that the four-issue length was intentional, designed to create a fast-paced, high-impact story without the “event fatigue” that can accompany longer, sprawling crossovers.
3)
The death of Ares was a point of contention for some fans and creators, as the character had been developed into a complex anti-hero during his time on the Mighty Avengers team. His brutal and sudden exit was seen by many as a shocking but effective way to establish the Sentry's immense threat level.
4)
Olivier Coipel's design for the Void was notably different and more monstrous than previous incarnations, emphasizing its cosmic horror nature over its previous, more humanoid “shadow-man” appearance.
5)
Source Material: The core story is contained in Siege #1-4 and Siege: The Cabal #1. Key tie-ins that expand the story include Thor #607-610, Avengers: The Initiative #32-35, and New Avengers #61-64.
6)
The final scene of Osborn in The Raft, ranting about his victory while his Green Goblin persona is reflected in a puddle, is a direct homage to classic Spider-Man stories, bringing his character full circle back to his roots as a madman.