Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== All-Black the Necrosword ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **All-Black the Necrosword is the first Symbiote, a sentient weapon of divine annihilation forged from the living abyss by the primordial deity Knull, capable of slaying gods and corrupting its wielder with an insatiable hunger for cosmic deicide.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** All-Black is the progenitor of the entire [[klyntar|Klyntar (Symbiote)]] race and one of the most powerful artifacts in the Marvel Universe. It represents a fundamental force of cosmic darkness, anathema to the divine light of beings like the [[celestials|Celestials]]. * **Primary Impact:** Its most infamous wielder, [[gorr_the_god_butcher|Gorr]], used it to wage a genocidal, millennium-long war against pantheons across the cosmos, permanently scarring the history of the gods and becoming a defining nemesis for [[thor_odinson|Thor]]. * **Key Incarnations:** In the comics (**Earth-616**), it is the first Symbiote, created by [[knull|Knull]]. In the **Marvel Cinematic Universe**, its origin is more mysterious; it is depicted as an ancient, cursed blade that responds to hatred for the gods, with no explicit connection to Knull or the Symbiotes. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== All-Black the Necrosword first appeared alongside its most famous wielder, Gorr, in **''Thor: God of Thunder'' #2 (January 2013)**. The weapon and its wielder were co-created by writer Jason Aaron and artist Esad Ribić as the central antagonists for their critically acclaimed run on the title. Initially presented as a uniquely powerful and mysterious weapon, its origins were left deliberately vague, described only as a "power from the black abyss" that had been wielded by a "dark elder god." This ambiguity was a narrative strength, focusing the story on the sword's devastating effects through Gorr's crusade. However, the true nature of All-Black was dramatically expanded and retconned years later by writer Donny Cates and artist Ryan Stegman in their run on **''Venom'' (Vol. 4)**, culminating in the **''King in Black'' (2020-2021)** crossover event. It was in **''Venom'' #4 (September 2018)** that the sword was revealed to be the very first Symbiote, created by Knull, the progenitor of the Symbiote race. This retcon fundamentally re-contextualized the sword, linking it directly to the mythology of [[venom_symbiote|Venom]], [[carnage_symbiote|Carnage]], and the entire Klyntar species, transforming it from a singular artifact into the source of a major cosmic race. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of All-Black the Necrosword is one of the most significant points of divergence between the prime comic continuity and its cinematic adaptation. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The story of All-Black begins before the universe itself. In the endless, primordial void that predated creation, there existed a single, malevolent consciousness: **[[knull|Knull]], the Lord of the Abyss**. When the [[celestials|Celestials]] arrived and began the work of creation—"Let there be light"—they trespassed upon Knull's dark kingdom. Enraged by this intrusion of light and life into his perfect, silent darkness, Knull retaliated. Reaching into his own living shadow, his "living abyss," he manifested a blade of pure void. This was the first Symbiote, All-Black. With this newly forged Necrosword, Knull attacked the invading Celestials, decapitating one of the cosmic gods with a single strike. The severed Celestial head would drift through space for eons, eventually becoming the mining colony known as **[[knowhere]]**. After his initial battle, Knull was wounded and crashed on a desolate, unnamed planet. The Necrosword separated from him while he recovered. It was on this same barren world that the sword was later found by two mortally wounded, dueling gods. One was a golden, benevolent god, and the other was Knull himself, in a weakened state. A mortal alien named [[gorr_the_god_butcher|Gorr]], exiled from his devout tribe for blasphemy after his family perished, stumbled upon this scene. Consumed by rage at the indifference of the gods he had once worshipped, Gorr's hatred resonated with the living darkness of the Necrosword. As the golden god begged for help, Gorr seized All-Black from Knull's grasp and used it to slay the deity. In that moment, the bond was forged, and Gorr the God Butcher began his reign of terror, empowered by the universe's first Symbiote. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === In the MCU, as depicted in **''Thor: Love and Thunder'' (2022)**, the Necrosword's origin is simplified and localized, removing its direct connection to Knull and the Symbiotes. The film establishes the sword as an ancient and legendary weapon of immense evil, capable of killing gods. Its specific creation is not detailed, but it is implied to be a singular, cursed artifact rather than the progenitor of a species. Gorr, a devout member of a race living on a barren, dying planet, loses his beloved daughter despite his unwavering faith in their patron god, Rapu. Seeking a final audience with Rapu in a lush oasis, Gorr finds his god to be callous, arrogant, and dismissive of his followers' suffering. Broken and disillusioned, Gorr is drawn by a sinister whisper to the Necrosword, which lay at the center of the oasis, seemingly discarded after the defeat of its previous wielder. The sword speaks to him, preying on his grief and newfound hatred. It promises him the power to exact revenge on all gods who selfishly ignore their mortal creations. Accepting the blade's dark pact, Gorr is instantly corrupted and empowered. He kills Rapu and vows to exterminate every god in the universe, becoming the God Butcher. In this continuity, the sword is the catalyst, a sentient evil that requires a host consumed by darkness to unlock its power. Its primary weakness is also established: its power comes at a great cost, slowly draining the life force of its wielder and corrupting them both physically and mentally. ===== Part 3: Composition, Powers & History ===== The nature and capabilities of the Necrosword differ significantly between the two main continuities, reflecting their different narrative purposes. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === As the first Symbiote, All-Black is composed of the "living abyss"—a primordial, quasi-sentient darkness that Knull commands. It is not a metal blade but a symbiotic entity that bonds with a host. Its power is directly tied to the cosmic void and darkness. **Key Powers and Attributes:** * **Divine Annihilation:** The Necrosword's primary and most infamous ability is its power to kill, injure, or corrupt even the most powerful cosmic and divine beings, including Skyfathers like [[odin|Odin]], abstract entities, and Celestials. * **Symbiotic Bonding and Corruption:** It forms a parasitic and psychological bond with its host. It feeds on the host's negative emotions, amplifying their hatred and rage while granting them immense power. Over time, it warps their mind and body, as seen with Gorr's physical transformation. * **Amorphous Weapon Manifestation:** While often appearing as a sword, All-Black is amorphous. Its wielder can reshape it into any form they can imagine: shields, armor, tendrils, wings, or even complex constructs. Gorr famously used it to create an army of "Black Berserkers"—sentient constructs of living darkness. * **Superhuman Augmentation:** It grants its wielder a staggering level of superhuman strength, speed, durability, and reflexes, allowing them to physically overpower cosmic beings like Thor. Gorr, an ordinary mortal, became capable of fighting three versions of Thor from different time periods simultaneously. * **Regeneration:** The wielder gains a potent healing factor, able to recover from grievous wounds, including decapitation and dismemberment, by drawing upon the living abyss. * **Matter Manipulation & Creation:** On a grand scale, the sword can manipulate darkness to construct entire worlds. Gorr used it to build a planetoid and the "Godbomb," a weapon designed to erase all gods from time. * **Symbiote Creation and Control:** As the progenitor Symbiote, it can spawn other Symbiotes. Gorr's Black Berserkers are a form of this, and Knull later used the Necrosword's power to form his vast Symbiote armies. * **Weaknesses:** As a creature of the void, its primary weaknesses are intense heat and sonics, similar to its Klyntar descendants. However, its immense primordial power makes it far more resistant than a typical Symbiote. It also requires a host; without one, it is largely inert. Its greatest weakness, however, may be conceptual: the divine power of a worthy god, like Thor wielding two Mjolnirs, could overwhelm and destroy it. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's Necrosword is a demonic, cursed artifact rather than a biological Symbiote. Its composition is unknown, but it appears as a jagged, obsidian-like blade that writhes with dark energy. Its sentience is more direct, whispering and tempting potential wielders. **Key Powers and Attributes:** * **God-Slaying Properties:** The sword's core function is its ability to inflict mortal wounds upon gods, who are otherwise nearly invulnerable. * **Shadow Manipulation:** The wielder gains umbrakinesis, the ability to manipulate shadows. This includes: * **Shadow Travel:** The ability to melt into one shadow and emerge from another, allowing for instantaneous teleportation across vast distances. * **Construct Creation:** The power to summon monstrous, shadowy creatures to serve as an army. These monsters are formidable but appear to be vulnerable to light and divine energy, particularly lightning. * **Corrupting Influence:** The sword is inherently malevolent. It preys on the wielder's negative emotions, promising power but demanding absolute servitude to its singular goal: the death of all gods. It physically transforms its host, making them pale and gaunt, with cracked skin and yellowed eyes. * **Life-Force Siphon:** A crucial element in the MCU is that the sword is a "curse." It grants immense power but slowly and inexorably kills its host, draining their life force. This adds a ticking clock to Gorr's crusade, making his quest for Eternity a desperate act to save himself as much as to achieve his goals. * **Weaknesses:** The MCU Necrosword has several defined weaknesses: * **Divine Power:** Powerful divine artifacts or energy, such as [[stormbreaker|Stormbreaker]], [[mjolnir|Mjolnir]], and Zeus's Thunderbolt, can damage and ultimately destroy it. * **The Wielder's Life:** As it drains its host, the wielder becomes progressively weaker and more ill. * **Separation:** If separated from its wielder, the host loses their powers and the sword's corrupting influence may recede. ===== Part 4: Key Wielders & Noteworthy Victims ===== While intrinsically linked to Gorr, All-Black has passed through several powerful hands, leaving a trail of divine blood across the eons. ==== Key Wielders ==== * **[[knull|Knull]] (Creator/First Wielder):** As the Lord of the Abyss, Knull is the sword's creator and true master. He forged it as an extension of his own will to fight the light of creation. His power with the blade is absolute, dwarfing that of any subsequent wielder. He used it to slay a Celestial and forge his dark kingdom. * **[[gorr_the_god_butcher|Gorr the God Butcher]] (Most Infamous Wielder):** Gorr is the character who defined the Necrosword. An ordinary mortal driven by grief and rage, his bond with All-Black was one of perfect, hateful synergy. For millennia, he used it to systematically butcher gods, enslave pantheons to build his Godbomb, and single-handedly defeat a young Thor, a present-day Avenger Thor, and a future King Thor. His entire legacy is built upon the power granted by this weapon. * **[[thor_odinson|Thor Odinson]] (Temporary Wielder):** In the final battle against Gorr at the end of time, Thor, having absorbed the Necrosword from the Godbomb's core into himself, became its temporary host. Wielding both Mjolnir and the Necrosword, he was finally powerful enough to defeat the God Butcher. However, he immediately rejected the sword's corrupting influence, proving his worthiness and casting the blade into a black hole. * **King Loki (Alternate Future Wielder):** In the far future timeline of King Thor, a depraved and elderly Loki retrieved the Necrosword from the black hole. He bonded with it and a remnant of the [[venom_symbiote|Venom symbiote]], waging a final, devastating war against his brother, Thor, at the end of all time. * **[[ego_the_living_planet|Ego the Living Planet]]:** For a brief period, a fragment of All-Black bonded with Ego, turning him into "Ego the Necroplanet" before he was ultimately defeated by a time-displaced King Thor. ==== Noteworthy Victims ==== The Necrosword's kill count is in the billions, spanning countless pantheons across the universe. While most are unnamed, several key victims highlight its power: * **The First Celestial:** Slain by Knull at the dawn of time. * **The Gods of Gorr's Homeworld:** The first deities to fall to Gorr, setting him on his path. * **The Falligar the Behemoth:** Champion of the Galactic Gullet and a friend of Thor, whose gargantuan corpse was discovered by Thor, serving as a chilling calling card for the God Butcher's rampage. * **The Time Gods of Chronux:** Enslaved by Gorr and forced to help him travel through time to kill gods from every era. * **Countless Skyfathers and Pantheons:** Gorr's crusade saw him defeat and kill the gods of war, fear, poetry, and thousands of other domains across the galaxies. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== === Thor: God of Thunder - "The God Butcher" & "Godbomb" (2013) === This is the foundational storyline for All-Black the Necrosword. Spanning the first eleven issues of Jason Aaron's run, it introduces Gorr and his weapon as a threat across three separate points in Thor's life. A young, unworthy Thor in the 9th century is the first to encounter and barely survive Gorr. In the present day, Thor the Avenger investigates the mysterious disappearances of entire pantheons, uncovering the horrifying scope of Gorr's ancient war. In the far future, a bitter, one-armed King Thor rules over a desolate and empty Asgard, the last of the gods, haunted by his final battle with the God Butcher. The three Thors are eventually brought together in the future to confront Gorr, who has enslaved countless gods to build the "Godbomb," a device powered by the Necrosword that is designed to detonate across the entire time stream, erasing every god who has ever or will ever exist. The story showcases the Necrosword's immense power, from creating armies of Berserkers to terraforming planets, and culminates in Thor's temporary bonding with the sword to achieve victory. === King in Black (2020-2021) === This massive crossover event served as the climax of Donny Cates's exploration of Symbiote mythology. Knull, freed from his cosmic prison, arrives on Earth with a galaxy-spanning army of Symbiote dragons, intending to reclaim the planet and extinguish all light. During this invasion, the true origin and nature of All-Black as Knull's creation are central to the plot. The heroes of Earth are completely overwhelmed by Knull's power, which is intrinsically linked to the Necrosword's living abyss. The final battle sees [[venom_eddie_brock|Eddie Brock]], empowered by the [[enigma_force|Enigma Force]] to become the new Captain Universe, manifest a cosmic version of Mjolnir combined with Silver Surfer's board to create an axe of pure light. He uses this celestial weapon to destroy Knull, shattering the god-Symbiote and freeing the universe from his dark reign, effectively destroying the source from which the Necrosword was first forged. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== While the Earth-616 and MCU versions are the primary incarnations, the concept of a "necro-sword" has appeared in other contexts, often leading to fan debate and confusion. ==== Hela's Necroswords (MCU - //Thor: Ragnarok//) ==== In the film **''Thor: Ragnarok'' (2017)**, Hela, the Goddess of Death, demonstrates the ability to manifest blades seemingly from thin air. These weapons are referred to as "Necroswords" in official art books and behind-the-scenes material. Visually, they share a similar aesthetic to All-Black: obsidian in color, jagged, and seemingly endless in supply. Hela uses them as her primary form of offense, throwing them as projectiles or wielding them in close combat with deadly proficiency. However, despite the name and appearance, these are **not** All-Black the Necrosword. There is no indication that Hela's swords are sentient, that they are a singular artifact, or that they have any connection to the living abyss or the Symbiotes. They are best understood as a manifestation of her innate Asgardian power as the Goddess of Death, allowing her to conjure weapons from her domain. The similar naming is likely a thematic homage by the filmmakers to the popular Jason Aaron comics, but within the MCU canon, her blades and Gorr's Necrosword are entirely separate and distinct artifacts with different origins and properties. ==== Video Game Adaptations ==== The Necrosword, or weapons inspired by it, have appeared in various video games. In **''Marvel's Contest of Champions''**, Gorr is a playable character who wields the All-Black, with its abilities reflecting its comic book powers of life-steal and deific damage. In **''Marvel Snap''**, Knull's card has the ability to resurrect destroyed cards, a nod to his control over the living darkness that constitutes the Necrosword and his Symbiote armies. These adaptations generally adhere to the Earth-616 origin, tying the sword to Knull and the Symbiotes. ===== See Also ===== * [[gorr_the_god_butcher]] * [[knull]] * [[symbiote]] * [[thor_odinson]] * [[king_in_black]] * [[celestials]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((All-Black the Necrosword is often debated by fans as one of the most powerful "Uru-class" weapons in the Marvel Universe, rivaling artifacts like the Infinity Gauntlet and the Ultimate Nullifier, though its power is more focused on destruction than reality-warping.)) ((The retcon establishing All-Black as the first Symbiote was a major narrative shift, but it cleverly built upon Jason Aaron's original description of the sword as a "living abyss" that bonded with Gorr, making the connection feel more like an elegant clarification than a direct contradiction.)) ((Source: ''Thor: God of Thunder'' #1-11 (2013) by Jason Aaron and Esad Ribić is the definitive origin story for Gorr's use of the weapon.)) ((Source: ''Venom'' (Vol. 4) #4 (2018) and the ''King in Black'' (2020-2021) miniseries by Donny Cates and Ryan Stegman detail the Necrosword's true origin with Knull.)) ((In the MCU, the design of the Necrosword features glowing orange cracks, visually representing both its corrupting power and the life force it is draining from its wielder, Gorr. This is a cinematic invention not present in the comics.)) ((The question "Is the Necrosword a Symbiote?" has a different answer depending on the universe. For the comics (Earth-616), the answer is a definitive **yes**, it is the very first one. For the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the answer is **no**, it is a distinct magical, cursed sword with no established connection to the Symbiotes shown in the //Venom// or //Spider-Man// films.))