Celestial Hosts

  • Core Identity: The Celestials are an ancient race of incomprehensibly powerful and enigmatic cosmic “space gods” who traverse the universe to conduct genetic experiments on nascent lifeforms, periodically returning in groups known as Hosts to judge their creations' progress and determine the fate of entire worlds.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: They are the silent, inscrutable gardeners and judges of the cosmos. Their primary mandate involves seeding potential on young planets, creating evolutionary offshoots like the eternals and the deviants, and fostering the conditions for genetic mutation, all to test and harvest evolutionary potential on a galactic scale.
  • Primary Impact: The Celestials are directly responsible for the existence of super-powered beings on Earth and countless other planets. Their experiments created the Eternals and Deviants and, through the tampering of the First Host, laid the genetic groundwork for the emergence of humanity's mutants (the X-Gene). Their judgments have threatened to extinguish all life on Earth on multiple occasions.
  • Key Incarnations: In the Earth-616 comics, their motives are abstract and judgmental, focused on cosmic balance and evolution. In the Marvel Cinematic Universe, their purpose is far more direct and tangible: they cultivate sentient life on planets to generate the energy required to birth new Celestials, a process which invariably destroys the host planet.

The Celestials first thundered into the Marvel Universe in The Eternals #1, published in July 1976. They were the brainchild of the legendary writer and artist Jack “The King” Kirby, who had recently returned to Marvel after a prolific period at DC Comics where he created the New Gods saga. The Celestials represent a direct evolution of Kirby's fascination with cosmic mythology, ancient astronauts, and the concept of god-like beings whose actions shape human history from the shadows. Kirby conceived of the Celestials as a way to create a new, standalone mythology within Marvel, one that was grander and more mysterious than the established Asgardians or Olympians. Their silent, colossal presence and unfathomable power were designed to evoke a sense of awe and cosmic dread. They were not villains in the traditional sense, but forces of nature, operating on a scale so vast that human morality was irrelevant to them. This ambiguity made them a compelling and enduring addition to Marvel's cosmic hierarchy, influencing decades of cosmic storytelling and serving as the ultimate high-stakes threat for Earth's heroes. Their creation firmly established a new tier of power in the universe, far beyond Earthly concerns, and posed profound questions about humanity's place in the cosmos.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Celestials is a matter of cosmic legend, shrouded in eons of history and subject to various retcons and expansions. Their full story differs significantly between the core comic continuity and their cinematic adaptation.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the prime Marvel continuity, the Celestials are among the oldest beings in existence, born during the dawn of the Second Cosmos (the first iteration of the Multiverse as we know it). They were created by the First Firmament, the sentient embodiment of the very first universe. The First Firmament was a singular, lonely entity and created life to serve it: the humble, planet-nurturing Progenitors and the multi-colored, defense-oriented Aspirants. A faction of the Progenitors, desiring their creations to evolve and change rather than remain static servants, broke away. This schism led to a cataclysmic civil war against the Aspirants and the First Firmament. During this war, these rebellious Progenitors developed devastating new weapons and, in a final, universe-shattering act, detonated them at the heart of the First Cosmos. This act shattered the First Firmament, splintering it into the nascent Multiverse. The victorious rebels, now reborn and encased in their iconic armor, became the Celestials. Their subsequent history is defined by their visits to promising worlds, arriving in groups called “Hosts.” Earth has been a particular focus of their attention:

  • The First Host (1,000,000 B.C.): A single, ailing Celestial known as the Progenitor came to Earth. It was infected by the Horde, a species of cosmic locusts. Before it died, its tainted blood and viscera seeped into the planet's primordial soup, altering the course of evolution and creating the potential for superhuman abilities—the “Alpha-Gene” that would much later become the X-Gene. Later, a larger group of Celestials arrived, including Zgreb the Aspirant, who was hunting for the Progenitor. They discovered its effect on the planet's nascent life. It was during this visit that they experimented on early humanity, creating the long-lived, god-like Eternals and the genetically unstable, monstrous Deviants. They also subtly altered baseline humanity, implanting a latent gene sequence that would allow for beneficial mutations under extreme conditions.
  • The Second Host (c. 21,000 B.C.): The Second Host arrived to check on their experiment. They found that the Deviants had created a vast, technologically advanced empire based in Lemuria and were attempting to challenge the Celestials' authority. In response, the Celestials laid waste to their empire, an event that caused the “Great Cataclysm,” sinking both Lemuria and Atlantis and drastically reshaping the Earth's surface.
  • The Third Host (c. 1,000 A.D.): The Third Host landed in Peru to continue their survey. They were confronted by a council of Earth's Sky-Fathers, including Odin of Asgard and Zeus of Olympus. The Earth gods challenged the Celestials' right to interfere with humanity. In a display of their awesome power, the Celestials effortlessly defeated them and issued an ultimatum: they would depart for one thousand years, but would then return to judge humanity's worthiness.
  • The Fourth Host: True to their word, the Celestials returned in modern times. This Host, led by Arishem the Judge, became the focal point of the original Eternals saga. Despite the combined efforts of the Eternals, the Asgardians (led by Odin in the Destroyer Armor), and humanity, they were no match for the Celestials. Ultimately, the Earth was spared when Gaea, the elder goddess of Earth, presented the Celestials with twelve exceptional human specimens (the “Young Gods”), proving humanity's evolutionary potential. The Celestials accepted this offering and departed, their judgment postponed.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU presents a more streamlined, but no less cosmic, origin for the Celestials and their purpose. As detailed in the film Eternals, the Celestials are primordial beings who predate the universe itself and were responsible for its creation. Arishem the Judge, the Prime Celestial, created the first stars, galaxies, and planets. Their fundamental purpose is cosmic procreation. Celestials gestate for eons inside the core of specially chosen planets. To facilitate this “Emergence,” they require a vast amount of energy that can only be generated by a large, intelligent, and complex population of sentient life. To this end, Arishem created the Eternals, a race of synthetic, super-powered beings, to be sent to these host worlds. The Eternals' mission is twofold:

1. Eradicate the predatory Deviants, who were an earlier, flawed creation designed to clear planets of apex predators but who evolved beyond their control and began preying on all life.
2. Subtly guide the planet's dominant species (like humanity) to develop and grow their civilization, thereby accelerating the population growth needed for the Emergence.

In this version, the Celestials are not judging a planet's “worthiness” in a moral or evolutionary sense. The entire process is a biological imperative—a means to an end. The flourishing of life on a planet like Earth is not the goal, but merely fuel for the birth of a new Celestial. This process is inherently destructive; the Emergence of the Celestial Tiamut from Earth's core would have completely shattered the planet. The core conflict of Eternals revolves around the team discovering this true purpose and choosing to defy their creators to save the humanity they had grown to love, successfully halting Tiamut's birth and leaving his partially emerged, marble-like form in the Indian Ocean.

The nature of the Celestials is one of the Marvel Universe's greatest mysteries, but certain aspects of their being have been revealed over time.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

  • Mandate and Purpose: The core mandate of the Celestials is to “judge.” They are cosmic gardeners on a scale beyond mortal comprehension. They travel the cosmos, find nascent worlds, and perform experiments to create and guide the evolution of life. Their goal seems to be the cultivation of diversity and the creation of powerful new lifeforms, which they then harvest or test for unknown purposes. The “Host” protocol is their standard operating procedure: they arrive, observe, and pass judgment. A “pass” allows the civilization to continue its development, while a “fail” results in the “purification” of the planet, usually carried out by an Exterminator-class Celestial like Exitar. Their ultimate master is believed tobe a being known as The Fulcrum, an omnipotent entity that may be an aspect of the One-Above-All.
  • Biology: A Celestial's iconic, massive suit of armor is not its true body. It is a shell or a vessel containing its true form: a being of pure, unimaginable cosmic energy. Their “blood” is a potent energy source, and as seen with the Progenitor, it can fundamentally alter the genetics of an entire planet. They are functionally immortal and nearly invulnerable. While they can be harmed or even killed by extraordinary means (such as by Knull's All-Black the Necrosword, the God-Killer armor, or the weapons of their ancient enemies, the Aspirants), destroying a Celestial is an event of universe-altering significance. When the Dreaming Celestial, Tiamut, was forcibly put to sleep by his brethren, he remained dormant for millennia before being reawakened.
  • Technology: Celestial technology is indistinguishable from magic and is considered Level V on the Intergalactic Technology Scale, a level described as “indefinable/godlike.” Their armor, their world-ships, and the instruments they use to re-order genetics and planetary systems operate on principles that defy the known laws of physics. They can create life from scratch, manipulate matter and energy on a universal scale, and collapse or create timelines.

^ Notable Earth-616 Celestials ^

Name Role/Title Key Information
Arishem the Judge Leader of the Fourth Host Holds the power to decide the fate of entire civilizations. His thumb-down gesture signals planetary termination.
Exitar the Exterminator The Executioner A 20,000-foot-tall Celestial tasked with “purifying” planets that fail judgment. His power dwarfs that of a standard Host.
Tiamut the Communicator (The Dreaming Celestial) Renegade A member of the Second Host who was deemed a traitor and sealed in a vault beneath modern-day San Francisco. His awakening threatened the planet until he chose to become a silent observer.
The Progenitor The First Visitor The diseased Celestial whose death on prehistoric Earth seeded the planet with the potential for superpowers. Was later resurrected as a tool for judgment.
Zgreb the Aspirant The Seeker The Celestial who was in love with the Progenitor and came to Earth searching for it, only to be driven mad by its death, becoming the first of the “Dark Celestials.”

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

  • Mandate and Purpose: The MCU simplifies the Celestials' mandate to a singular, driving goal: self-perpetuation. Their entire cosmic cycle of creating galaxies and life is in service of birthing more of their own kind. They are not judging morality or evolutionary fitness; they are farming energy. This gives them a more amoral, almost parasitic quality. Arishem states that for one life form to be born (a Celestial), another (an entire planetary civilization) must die, framing it as a natural, cosmic balance.
  • Biology: The MCU depicts Celestials as massive, biomechanical beings whose physical forms appear to be their true bodies. We see them create galaxies with their bare hands, and one uses the Power Stone directly via a staff. The aborted Emergence of Tiamut reveals a physical, mineral-like body being formed within the planet's core. Knowhere, the colossal severed head of a Celestial, is being mined for its organic material, suggesting a more conventional (if cosmic) biology than their comic counterparts. Their power is immense; Ego, a lesser Celestial, was able to project a humanoid avatar and manipulate matter on a planetary scale, while Arishem can effortlessly teleport planets and beings across galaxies.
  • Technology: Celestial technology in the MCU is focused on their creative purpose. The most significant piece of technology revealed is the World Forge, a cosmic station where Arishem creates the Eternals. It stores the memories of every Eternal from every mission, allowing them to be “rebooted” and redeployed after their host planet is destroyed, their memories wiped to ensure compliance. The Eternals themselves, with their cosmic energy powers and near-immortality, are products of this advanced Celestial technology.

Due to their immense power and cosmic perspective, Celestials do not have “allies” or “enemies” in the conventional sense. Instead, they have creations, cosmic counterparts, and those foolish or powerful enough to oppose their will.

  • The Eternals: In both continuities, the Eternals are the Celestials' most successful creation. In the comics, they are an advanced evolutionary offshoot of humanity, tasked with protecting Earth's evolution from the Deviants. In the MCU, they are synthetic constructs with a more direct mission to facilitate the Emergence. In both cases, they are tied inextricably to the Celestials' will.
  • The Deviants: The genetic foils to the Eternals. In the comics, their unstable genetics cause them to have widely varied, often monstrous forms, and they are obsessed with warfare and conquest. In the MCU, they are predators who evolved beyond their creators' control, becoming a direct threat to the very life needed for an Emergence.
  • The X-Gene (Mutants): A key retcon in Earth-616 established that the Progenitor's death on primordial Earth is the ultimate origin of the potential for mutation in humans. The Celestials' subsequent genetic tampering on early man activated this potential, making them the indirect progenitors of all mutants on Earth, from the x-men to their greatest foes.
  • The Watchers: Another ancient race, the Watchers took an oath of strict non-interference after one of their early attempts to aid a lesser species resulted in catastrophe. Their philosophy is the polar opposite of the Celestials' hands-on, interventionist approach, leading to a dynamic of cosmic tension between the two races.
  • Galactus, the Devourer of Worlds: Galactus is a unique being, the sole survivor of the universe that existed before the current one. As a fundamental force of cosmic balance, he often comes into conflict with the Celestials, who see his consumption of worlds—some of which may be their experiments—as an interference. They have clashed directly, with the Celestials proving to be superior in power.
  • The Horde: The cosmic antithesis to the Celestials. Where the Celestials create and cultivate, the Horde are a “cosmic locust” plague that consumes and destroys all they touch. They were responsible for the infection that killed the Progenitor, inadvertently leading to Earth's super-powered future.
  • The Aspirants: The ancient foes of the Celestials from the First Cosmos. Led by the First Firmament, they fought a war that literally broke the first universe. Their desire for a static, unchanging creation is the opposite of the Celestials' belief in dynamic evolution.
  • Knull, the King in Black: An elder god of darkness and creator of the symbiotes. In his early history, Knull beheaded a Celestial with his All-Black Necrosword and used its head as a forge to create the first symbiotes. The severed head would later become the mining colony known as knowhere.

The arrival of a Celestial Host is almost always a world-ending or world-altering event, making them central to some of Marvel's most epic cosmic tales.

The Fourth Host Saga (Eternals Vol. 1)

The original and defining Celestial story. Following their thousand-year absence, Arishem the Judge and the Fourth Host arrive on Earth to render their final judgment. The story follows the Eternals as they grapple with their purpose and attempt to defend humanity. The saga's climax sees Odin inhabit the Destroyer armor and wield the Odinsword, leading the Asgardians against them. Despite this immense power, the Celestials are unphased. The conflict only ends when Gaea brokers a truce, offering twelve of humanity's best and brightest as proof of their potential, satisfying the Celestials and causing them to depart in peace.

The Dreaming Celestial (Eternals Vol. 3 & Uncanny X-Men)

This storyline reveals the existence of Tiamut, a Celestial sealed away by his own kind for an unknown crime. When he is inadvertently awakened, his presence threatens to destroy the entire planet. The conflict draws in the X-Men, who have made their headquarters nearby in San Francisco. Instead of destroying Earth upon his full awakening, Tiamut is swayed by the complexity and potential of humanity. He chooses to stand silent, a colossal, motionless statue in the San Francisco bay, observing humanity without passing judgment, becoming a strange and awe-inspiring global landmark.

The Final Host (Avengers Vol. 8)

This arc dramatically rewrote the Celestials' history with Earth. It revealed the story of the dying, infected Progenitor as the true origin of superpowers on Earth. It also introduced the Dark Celestials, the original Host who came to Earth a million years ago, driven mad by the Horde. This Final Host arrives in the present day to cleanse the planet. To fight them, the Avengers resurrect a fallen Celestial and pilot its armor as the “God-Killer, Mark II,” uniting a new team of Earth's Mightiest Heroes in a battle of truly cosmic proportions.

A.X.E.: Judgment Day

In this modern event, the Eternals, under the leadership of a resurrected Druig, decide that mutantkind is a form of “excess deviation” and declare war on the mutant nation of Krakoa. To settle the conflict, they resurrect the Progenitor Celestial with the intent of using it as a weapon. However, the reborn god-being attains its own consciousness and decides to judge all of Earth. It gives the entire planet 24 hours to justify its existence, subjecting every individual—hero, villain, and civilian alike—to personal judgment, forcing the world to confront its sins in the face of oblivion. This event re-contextualized the “Celestial Judgment” from a cosmic abstraction to an intensely personal, character-driven crisis.

  • Earth X (Earth-9997): This alternate reality provided a groundbreaking new take on the Celestials that heavily influenced the MCU. In this universe, Celestials are beings of pure energy who gestate within planets. They manipulate the evolution of the dominant species, creating super-powered beings to act as a planetary immune system to protect the Celestial “egg” from cosmic threats like Galactus. Once the Celestial is born, the planet is destroyed. The Earth of this reality contains a Celestial embryo, and all of Earth's superhumans are unwitting antibodies for its protection.
  • Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610): While not visually identical, the enigmatic and powerful race known as the Exterminators in the Ultimate Comics series Ultimate Mystery serve a similar function to the Celestials. They are an ancient race of machine-gods who seed worlds with life and later return to harvest that life for their own purposes, acting as a precursor to the arrival of the Gah Lak Tus swarm.
  • Marvel Cinematic Universe (Earth-199999): As detailed extensively above, the MCU's version of the Celestials streamlines their motives to procreation. This change, while diverging from the comics' more mysterious lore, provides a clear and compelling motivation for their actions and a more personal stake for the heroes who oppose them, as seen in Eternals.

1)
The Celestials' first appearance was in The Eternals #1 (July 1976), created by Jack Kirby.
2)
Many fans and comic historians believe Jack Kirby's creation of the Celestials was directly inspired by Erich von Däniken's 1968 book Chariots of the Gods?, which popularized the “ancient astronauts” theory.
3)
The concept of a “dead god's head” being a location in space existed before Knull's retcon. Knowhere was first introduced in Nova Vol. 4 #8 (2008) as the severed head of an unknown Celestial, serving as a base of operations for the guardians_of_the_galaxy.
4)
The number of Celestials in a Host varies. The Fourth Host, for example, consisted of nine members, including Arishem, Oneg the Prober, Tefral the Surveyor, and Jemiah the Analyzer.
5)
In the comics, Odin's father, Bor, once fought the First Host of Celestials. This historical animosity helps explain Odin's extreme defiance during the Third Host's arrival.
6)
The language of the Celestials is indecipherable to most beings. When they do communicate, it is often through telepathic projection or through a designated intermediary, such as Tiamut the Communicator.
7)
The visual effect of the “Kirby Krackle,” the black, bubbling energy pattern Jack Kirby used to depict cosmic power, is often considered the visual representation of the raw energy wielded by the Celestials.