Table of Contents

Wanda Maximoff (Scarlet Witch)

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

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

The Scarlet Witch first appeared in The X-Men #4 in March 1964. She was created by the legendary duo of writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby, the architects of much of the early Marvel Universe. Initially introduced as a villain, Wanda, along with her twin brother Pietro (Quicksilver), was a reluctant member of Magneto's original Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. Lee and Kirby designed her as a counterpoint to the more physically-oriented heroes and villains of the time. Her vaguely defined “hex power” made her unpredictable and formidable. Her striking visual design, with the iconic red wimple and costume, made her instantly recognizable. In a pivotal move for character development, Lee and Kirby had Wanda and Pietro quickly repent their villainous ways, and they became founding members of the second generation of Avengers in Avengers #16 (1965), a group famously dubbed “Cap's Kooky Quartet” alongside Captain America and Hawkeye. This transition from villain to hero became a core theme of her character, a cycle of tragedy, mistake, and redemption that would define her for decades to come.

In-Universe Origin Story

Wanda's in-universe origin is one of the most convoluted and frequently altered in Marvel Comics history, a stark contrast to her more streamlined MCU counterpart. Understanding these changes is key to understanding the character.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Wanda Maximoff's story begins in the mountains of Transia, born on Wundagore Mountain alongside her twin brother, Pietro Maximoff. For decades, their origin was tied directly to the x-men mythos. They were believed to be the mutant children of Erik Lehnsherr, the master of magnetism known as Magneto. Their mother, Magda, fled from Magneto in terror after witnessing his powers and took refuge at Wundagore, home of the High Evolutionary. She gave birth to the twins and then disappeared, presumed dead. At their birth, the elder god Chthon, an ancient demon of chaos, was imprisoned within Mount Wundagore. He sensed Wanda's nascent magical potential and “touched” her, marking her as a future vessel and bestowing upon her the latent affinity for Chaos Magic. The High Evolutionary, a master geneticist, abducted the infants for his experiments before placing them in the care of Django and Marya Maximoff, a Romani couple. This upbringing gave them the surname Maximoff and a deep connection to their community, though tragedy would soon strike as their burgeoning powers led to local superstition and violence, resulting in their adoptive mother's death. Fleeing the mob, Wanda and Pietro were rescued by Magneto, who, unaware of their true (at the time) parentage, recruited them into his Brotherhood of Evil Mutants out of a sense of obligation. They served him reluctantly, often disagreeing with his extreme methods, until they saw an opportunity to leave and join the Avengers, seeking redemption. This origin story remained canon for decades. However, the 2014 storyline AXIS brought a seismic retcon. During a spell, Wanda discovered that Magneto was not her biological father. The subsequent Uncanny Avengers series revealed the “truth”: Wanda and Pietro were not mutants at all. They were ordinary human children who were taken by the High Evolutionary and subjected to his genetic experiments, which unlocked their latent superhuman abilities. Their supposed mother was Natalya Maximoff, a powerful sorceress and the previous Scarlet Witch of her generation, making Wanda's powers a combination of genetic manipulation and mystical inheritance. This retcon was controversial, as it severed her long-standing ties to Magneto and the entire mutant narrative, a change believed to be motivated by corporate synergy with the MCU, where her mutant origins could not be used due to film rights issues.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU provides a far more direct and emotionally grounded origin for Wanda Maximoff, portrayed by Elizabeth Olsen. Introduced in the post-credits scene of Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014) and fully in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Wanda and her twin Pietro are natives of the fictional Eastern European nation of Sokovia. Their childhood was shattered when a mortar shell, manufactured by Stark Industries, destroyed their apartment, killing their parents and trapping the ten-year-old twins in the rubble for two days, staring at a second, unexploded Stark shell. This experience instilled in them a profound hatred for Tony Stark and, by extension, the Avengers. As young adults, they volunteered for experiments conducted by hydra's Baron von Strucker, who was using the scepter containing the Mind Stone to create enhanced individuals. Both Wanda and Pietro were the sole survivors of these experiments. The Mind Stone amplified Wanda's latent magical abilities, which were implied in the series WandaVision to have always existed within her, granting her a suite of powers including telekinesis, telepathy, and energy manipulation. Initially, the twins ally with the sentient A.I. ultron in their quest for revenge against Stark. However, upon discovering Ultron's genocidal plan to destroy humanity, they switch their allegiance and join the Avengers in the Battle of Sokovia. Pietro is tragically killed during the battle, a loss that profoundly traumatizes Wanda and becomes a cornerstone of her future grief and instability. She is subsequently recruited as a full-fledged member of the Avengers, where she develops a deep romantic relationship with the synthezoid Vision. The MCU arc focuses less on genetic origins (mutant vs. enhanced) and more on a mythological destiny. WandaVision reveals that Wanda is not simply a woman with powers, but the living embodiment of a prophesied being of immense power known as the Scarlet Witch, whose magic is Chaos Magic and who is destined to be more powerful than the Sorcerer Supreme. This narrative frames her powers not as a scientific accident, but as an innate, mythical inheritance she was fated to claim.

Part 3: Powers, Abilities & Psychological Profile

Wanda's capabilities are vast, complex, and directly tied to her emotional state. Her power levels have fluctuated dramatically over the years, but at her peak, she is one of the most powerful beings in the universe.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the comics, Wanda's powers have evolved from simple “hexes” to god-like reality manipulation.

Psychological Profile: Wanda's immense power is tragically anchored to profound emotional instability, rooted in a lifetime of loss and trauma. The deaths of her adoptive parents, the loss of her brother, the dissolution of her marriage to Vision, and the magical erasure of her children have each triggered catastrophic breakdowns. Her psyche is a battleground between her desire for a normal life and the universe-altering power she wields. This makes her incredibly vulnerable to manipulation by villains like Doctor Doom and Immortus, who have exploited her grief to their own ends. Her story is a perpetual cycle of immense suffering, catastrophic lashing out, and a desperate, often successful, quest for redemption.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU visualizes Wanda's powers differently and ties their evolution directly to her emotional journey and the Infinity Stones.

Psychological Profile: The MCU's Wanda is defined by an ever-compounding sense of grief. Every major event in her life is marked by loss: her parents, her country, her brother Pietro, and finally Vision, whom she is forced to kill herself before watching Thanos murder him again. This unyielding trauma is the catalyst for her actions in WandaVision, where she enslaves a town not out of malice, but out of a desperate, subconscious need to escape her pain. Her subsequent corruption by the Darkhold in Multiverse of Madness shows a darker turn, as her grief twists into a desperate, violent obsession to be reunited with her children in another reality. Her MCU journey is a tragic fall from a hero broken by loss into a villain consumed by it.

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

Avengers Disassembled (2004)

This storyline, written by Brian Michael Bendis, marks the tragic turning point for the modern version of Wanda. After a stray comment from the Wasp triggers a subconscious memory of her lost children, Wanda suffers a complete mental and emotional breakdown. Unaware of the true scope of her powers, she lashes out with her reality-warping abilities. She makes Tony Stark appear drunk at the U.N., resurrects a dead Jack of Hearts as a zombie bomb that kills Scott Lang (Ant-Man), causes a fleet of Ultron robots to attack, and manipulates a Kree warship to appear, leading to Hawkeye's heroic sacrifice. She murders Agatha Harkness and, in a final confrontation, is only stopped when Doctor Strange is forced to place her in a catatonic state. The event completely dismantled the classic Avengers roster and established Wanda as a world-level threat, a hero who had fallen completely due to unchecked grief and power.

House of M (2005)

Picking up directly from Disassembled, House of M explores the consequences of Wanda's breakdown. As the X-Men and the new Avengers debate whether they must kill Wanda to prevent her from threatening reality again, her brother Pietro, fearing for her life, convinces her to use her powers one last time. Instead of simply defending herself, Wanda reshapes the entire world into the “House of M” reality—a world where everyone's deepest wish is granted, and Magneto and his mutant family rule supreme. When a group of heroes with their memories restored confront Wanda, the emotionally shattered witch, manipulated by Magneto's cruelty, decides that mutants are the source of all her suffering. She utters three words that change the Marvel Universe forever: “No more mutants.” In a flash of white light, reality is restored, but over 90% of the world's mutants are permanently depowered, an event known as M-Day or the Decimation. This act cemented Wanda's legacy as both a victim and a villain, and its consequences drove mutant-related storylines for nearly a decade.

The Children's Crusade (2010-2012)

This series serves as Wanda's primary redemption arc. The story follows the Young Avengers, specifically the twin heroes Wiccan and Speed, who are discovered to be the reincarnated souls of Wanda's lost children, Thomas and William. They seek out Wanda, who is found in Latveria, amnesiac and engaged to Doctor Doom. As her memories slowly return, it is revealed that Doom was the one who manipulated her into causing the Decimation, hoping to harness her power. In a climactic battle, Wanda regains her full memory and powers. Overcome with guilt for her actions, she successfully restores the powers of several mutants (including Rictor), proving that the Decimation could be reversed. While not a full reset, the event absolved Wanda of sole responsibility, re-cast her as a pawn in Doom's game, and set her back on the long path to becoming a hero again.

WandaVision (MCU, 2021)

This Disney+ series is the MCU's equivalent of Disassembled and House of M, exploring Wanda's profound grief following Vision's death in Avengers: Infinity War. Visiting a plot of land in Westview, New Jersey, that Vision had purchased for them to build a home, Wanda is overcome by sorrow and spontaneously unleashes a wave of Chaos Magic, creating a pocket reality (the Hex) that transforms the town and its residents into a living sitcom. She magically manifests a new Vision and twin sons, Tommy and Billy. The series deconstructs her trauma through the lens of different eras of television, while S.W.O.R.D. tries to intervene from the outside. The story forces Wanda to confront the morality of her actions—imprisoning thousands of minds to soothe her own pain—and ultimately choose to dismantle her false reality, sacrificing her family once again to free the town. It is here that she fully embraces her identity as the Scarlet Witch, a being of immense mythical power.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

See Also

Notes and Trivia

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

1)
Wanda's original costume, including her iconic pointed wimple, was designed by Jack Kirby. It has been modified numerous times but remains one of the most recognizable in comics.
2)
The parentage of Wanda and Pietro has been one of the most retconned plot points in Marvel history. For years they were the children of Golden Age heroes The Whizzer and Miss America, then revealed to be the children of Magneto, and currently are considered the magically-altered children of the Maximoffs. Many fans still consider the Magneto connection to be their “true” origin.
3)
In the comics, Wanda's son William Kaplan (Wiccan) is one of the most prominent gay characters in the Marvel Universe and is destined to one day become the Sorcerer Supreme, much like Doctor Strange.
4)
The MCU's decision to make Wanda the primary antagonist of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness was a direct result of the massive fan response to her character arc in WandaVision.
5)
The phrase “No more mutants” is arguably one of the three most impactful short phrases in modern comics, alongside “The Sentry is coming” from New Avengers and “Whosever holds this hammer…” from Thor.
6)
Source Material for Key Storylines: The X-Men #4 (1964), Avengers #16 (1965), The Vision and the Scarlet Witch (Vol. 2, 1985), Avengers Disassembled (Avengers #500-503, 2004), House of M (2005), Avengers: The Children's Crusade (2010).