celestials

Celestials

  • Core Identity: The Celestials are an ancient and enigmatic race of colossal, armored cosmic “space gods” who traverse the universe to conduct genetic experiments on nascent lifeforms, ultimately returning to judge whether their creations are worthy of survival.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: Functioning as cosmic gardeners and arbiters of evolution, the Celestials are responsible for seeding the potential for greatness—or destruction—across countless worlds. Their experiments created pivotal races like the eternals and the deviants, and they are the source of the “X-Gene” in humanity within the comic continuity.
  • Primary Impact: Their most significant influence is the cycle of “Hosts”—visitations where they arrive en masse to judge a planet. The threat of their judgment has forced gods and heroes to unite, as their verdict can lead to the “purification” or complete extermination of a planet's population by beings like exitar_the_exterminator.
  • Key Incarnations: In the Earth-616 comics, their motives are profoundly alien, mysterious, and tied to the fundamental architecture of the multiverse. In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), their purpose is more explicitly defined: they create life and galaxies as part of a cosmic reproductive cycle, using planets as incubators for new Celestials.

The Celestials first appeared in The Eternals #1 in July 1976, bursting from the cosmic imagination of the legendary writer and artist Jack "The King" Kirby. Their creation came during Kirby's second tenure at Marvel Comics, following his groundbreaking work on DC Comics' “Fourth World” saga (which featured the New Gods). The Celestials share a thematic DNA with the New Gods, embodying Kirby's fascination with epic, mythological sci-fi and the concept of god-like beings who operate on a scale far beyond human comprehension. Kirby's design for the Celestials—impossibly large, silent, and uniquely armored figures—was revolutionary. It eschewed traditional humanoid or monstrous alien tropes in favor of something truly unknowable and awe-inspiring. This creative choice was heavily influenced by the “ancient astronauts” theories popularized in the 1970s by authors like Erich von Däniken, whose book Chariots of the Gods? postulated that aliens had visited ancient Earth and were mistaken for deities. Kirby took this concept and made it the bedrock of his new corner of the Marvel Universe, positing that the Celestials were the real “gods” who manipulated human evolution and inspired myth. Their silent, judgmental nature made them a perfect narrative device: an ultimate, impartial, and terrifyingly powerful force of nature.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Celestials is one of the most profound and frequently expanded-upon concepts in Marvel lore. The details differ significantly between the comics and the cinematic universe, reflecting their distinct narrative goals.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The true origin of the Celestials in the comics is a saga of cosmic rebellion and multiversal genesis. Long before the current iteration of the multiverse, there existed only the First Firmament, the first sentient universe. It was a singular, lonely being. To cure its solitude, the First Firmament created life: celestial-like beings known as the Aspirants. The Aspirants were loyal and monochrome, worshipping their creator. However, a faction of these creations believed that life should be diverse, evolving, and capable of change—and that it should die, making way for new life. They wanted to create their own life to watch it grow. These multi-colored rebels became the first Celestials. This ideological schism led to a cataclysmic civil war that raged for eons. The Celestials, in their pursuit of a dynamic, evolving reality, created weapons of unimaginable power. This war shattered the First Firmament, and the fragments coalesced into the very first Multiverse—the Second Cosmos. The Celestials then went forth to populate these new universes with their grand experiments. Their primary mission became a cycle of creation and judgment. They would arrive on a fertile world in what is known as a “Host”:

  • The First Host (One Million Years Ago): The Celestials first came to Earth and found early humanity. They performed experiments, fracturing the species into three distinct lines: the god-like, immortal Eternals; the genetically unstable, monstrous Deviants; and the baseline Humanity, which was secretly imbued with the potential for mutation (the X-Gene) and superhuman abilities. This was done to test the adaptability of the species. The First Host was also responsible for dealing with a fallen, infected Celestial known as the Progenitor, whose death on the planet infused it with cosmic energies.
  • The Second Host (Circa 21st Century BC): The Celestials returned to find the Deviants had used their advanced technology to build a vast empire and had attacked the Celestials. In response, Ziran the Tester and Oneg the Prober unleashed a deluge that sank the Deviant capital of Lemuria and reshaped the continents, an event that would become the basis for Earth's “Great Flood” myths.
  • The Third Host (Circa 1000 AD): This Host arrived to check on humanity's progress. They were met by an alliance of Earth's sky-gods, led by odin of Asgard and zeus of Olympus. Odin, wearing the formidable destroyer_armor and wielding the Odinsword, confronted the Celestials directly. He and his allies were swiftly defeated. The Celestials, through their silent representative Arishem the Judge, forced the gods into a truce: they would not interfere with the Celestials' monitoring of humanity for one thousand years, at which point the final judgment would come.
  • The Fourth Host (Modern Era): True to their word, the Celestials returned for their final judgment. This event brought them into conflict with thor, the Eternals, and even a penitent Odin in the Destroyer armor. Despite their immense power, Earth's defenders were no match for the Celestials. Ultimately, the Earth goddess gaea intervened, offering the Celestials twelve of humanity's best and brightest (the “Young Gods”) as a tribute to the potential of the species. Arishem accepted this offering and judged Earth worthy of survival… for now.

This history paints the Celestials not as evil, but as a force beyond conventional morality, akin to a cosmic scientist tending to a vast, planetary petri dish.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU provides a more direct, and in some ways more horrifying, explanation for the Celestials' existence and purpose. As revealed primarily in the film Eternals (2021), the Celestials are the primordial creators of the universe itself. According to the Celestial Arishem the Judge, the first Celestial, Celestials are born from the core of planets. To facilitate this birth, a planet needs a vast population of intelligent life to generate the necessary cosmic energy. The entire process is a cosmic life cycle:

1. **Creation:** A Celestial "seeds" a fertile planet with a Celestial embryo deep within its core.
2. **Cultivation:** The Celestials then introduce life to the planet. To protect the planet's nascent intelligent species from apex predators so they may flourish and grow in population, Arishem created the **Deviants**.
3. **Correction:** The Deviants evolved beyond their programming and began hunting the intelligent life they were meant to protect. To correct this, Arishem created the **Eternals**, synthetic, immortal beings programmed with absolute loyalty, and sent them to eradicate the Deviants.
4. **The Emergence:** Once the planet's population reaches a critical mass, the immense life energy it generates triggers the "Emergence"—the birth of the new Celestial. This event, however, is cataclysmic and results in the complete and utter destruction of the host planet and all life on it.
5. **The Cycle Repeats:** The newly born Celestial joins its brethren, and together they create new stars, galaxies, and planets, continuing the cycle of life and cosmic birth across the universe.

This origin story fundamentally changes their motivation. They are not judging a planet's moral worthiness or evolutionary potential, but rather using it as a cosmic egg. The Eternals' entire mission for millennia was a lie; they were not protectors of humanity, but unwitting cattle farmers, fattening up a planet for slaughter. The MCU also introduced a major deviation with the character of Ego in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017). Ego claimed to be a Celestial, an ancient consciousness that formed a planet around itself. While immensely powerful, his nature as a singular, self-aware brain-planet with a biological reproductive drive (fathering children across the galaxy, like Peter Quill) differs from the “Emergence” process described by Arishem. This suggests there may be different types or “sub-species” of Celestials within the MCU.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The core mandate of the Earth-616 Celestials is to “Create, Experiment, Judge.” They are agents of the cosmic order, serving a higher power known as The Fulcrum (who is strongly implied to be an aspect of the One-Above-All, the supreme being of the Marvel Multiverse). Their purpose is to foster evolution and complexity in the universe. They see change and diversity as sacred, which puts them in direct opposition to cosmic forces of stasis or destruction, like their ancient enemies, the Horde—insectoid beings from the First Firmament who represent cosmic rot and nothingness. Their judgment is not based on human-centric concepts of good and evil, but on a species' overall genetic potential and contribution to the cosmic tapestry.

What is a Celestial? A Celestial's true form is a mystery. The colossal, armored figures seen by mortals are merely shells or vessels. Inside these suits of armor, which can be thousands of feet tall, is a being of pure, unimaginable cosmic energy. Their physiology is so advanced that it borders on the magical. They are nearly invulnerable; conventional weapons, even those wielded by gods like Odin, are largely ineffective. It took the combined power of three sky-fathers to even inconvenience a single, mid-level Celestial. To harm a Celestial requires a “god-killer” weapon of equal cosmic significance, such as the Godkiller armor built by the Aspirants, the reality-altering powers of the Infinity Gauntlet, or the life-draining touch of the Horde. When a Celestial's armor is breached, it “bleeds” cosmic energy, a process that can have devastating consequences for the surrounding reality.

The Celestials' technology is indistinguishable from reality-warping. They can create life from scratch, manipulate matter and energy on a galactic scale, and travel through dimensions and time at will. Their knowledge is effectively infinite. Specific examples of their technology include:

  • Genetic Manipulation: Their primary tool, used to create the Eternals, Deviants, and the X-Gene.
  • World-Forging: They can create and move planets, as seen in the MCU's World Forge.
  • The Black Vortex: An artifact of Celestial origin that can unlock a being's full cosmic potential, but at a great cost.
  • Servitors: They employ lesser beings to carry out their will, such as the Gatherers, who collect genetic data.
  • Arishem the Judge: The leader of the Celestial Hosts on Earth. He is the one who delivers the final verdict.
  • Exitar the Exterminator: A 20,000-foot-tall Celestial who is summoned to carry out the “purification” of a failed world. His arrival signals the end.
  • Tiamut, the Communicator (The Dreaming Celestial): A renegade Celestial who was imprisoned beneath the Earth for questioning the Celestials' grand design. His awakening was a major threat.
  • Eson the Searcher: Tasked with seeking out worlds for experimentation.
  • Ziran the Tester: Conducts stress tests and experiments on the lifeforms of a world.
  • Scathan the Approver: A Celestial from a distant future who serves the living_tribunal. His function is to simply approve or disapprove of cosmic events, and his “thumbs down” carries immense weight.
  • The Progenitor: The first Celestial to ever visit Earth, whose infected body fell to the planet and became the source of all superhuman abilities.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU Celestials' mandate is singular and self-serving: procreation. Their entire universal construction project—creating stars, light, matter, and gravity—is in service of their own reproductive cycle. They are not necessarily interested in the quality or morality of the life they create, only its quantity. A larger population provides more energy for the Emergence. This makes their purpose far more tangible and understandable than their comic counterparts, but also positions them as an unambiguous cosmic threat to any world chosen to be an incubator.

MCU Celestials are living engines of cosmic energy. As seen with the birth of Tiamut, they are born from a planetary core and grow to an immense, planet-sized scale. Their “armor” appears to be a hardened, physical manifestation of their energy. They can project their consciousness across galaxies (as Arishem does) and manipulate matter to create constructs like the Eternals. The case of Ego suggests that at their core, they can be a singular, living consciousness that can build a planetary body for itself over eons. They require vast amounts of energy to sustain themselves, which is the primary driver of their life cycle.

The technology of the MCU Celestials is biological and integrated.

  • The Eternals & Deviants: These are essentially sophisticated, self-replicating biological androids or weapons, created to carry out a specific task.
  • The World Forge: A massive cosmic station where Arishem creates and stores the consciousnesses of the Eternals, ready to be redeployed with new memories for the next mission.
  • The Uni-Mind: A powerful connection that allows Eternals to link their minds and powers, channeling immense cosmic energy. This is a tool given to them by the Celestials, but it can also be used against them, as seen when the Eternals used it to halt Tiamut's Emergence.
  • Arishem the Judge: The Prime Celestial, responsible for creating the first sun and overseeing the Emergence cycle across the universe.
  • Tiamut: The Celestial who was gestating inside Earth's core. His partial Emergence was stopped by the Eternals, leaving his giant, petrified hand and head sticking out of the Indian Ocean.
  • Eson the Searcher: Seen in a flashback in Guardians of the Galaxy wielding the power_stone to wipe out an entire civilization.
  • Jemiah the Analyzer, Nezarr the Calculator, Hargen the Measurer: Seen briefly in Arishem's exposition in Eternals.
  • Ego: The father of Peter Quill, a unique Celestial who existed as a living planet.
  • Knowhere: The giant, decapitated head of a dead Celestial, which was repurposed as a mining colony and criminal outpost.
  • The Eternals: In both continuities, the Eternals are the Celestials' “perfect” creation. In the comics, they are genetically superior, immortal beings designed to protect Earth. In the MCU, they are synthetic constructs designed to protect the “crop” of intelligent life for the Emergence. Their relationship is that of creator and creation, but one that becomes strained when the Eternals develop a conscience and genuine affection for the life they are meant to sacrifice.
  • The Deviants: The Celestials' failed experiment. In the comics, they are genetically unstable beings prone to mutation, representing chaos in contrast to the Eternals' order. In the MCU, they were originally predators who evolved beyond their programming. In both versions, they are a constant source of conflict and a reminder of the unpredictable nature of the Celestials' work.
  • Humanity: The ultimate subject of the Celestials' experiments. In Earth-616, humanity is the control group, the baseline from which all potential is measured. The Celestials' gift of the “X-Gene” makes humanity the key to future evolution, a fact that drives countless Marvel storylines. In the MCU, humanity is simply fuel, a resource to be consumed for the birth of a new Celestial.
  • The Horde: The antithesis of the Celestials in the comics. Where Celestials foster diverse life, the Horde consumes it, representing universal decay and entropy. They are the “locusts” to the Celestials' “gardeners” and are one of the few things in the universe that can truly kill a Celestial by “infecting” them.
  • Galactus: The relationship between the Celestials and Galactus, the Devourer of Worlds, is complex. Both are fundamental forces of the universe. They have clashed on occasion, with a battle between Galactus and several Celestials ending in a stalemate. Generally, they seem to recognize each other's cosmic purpose and maintain a wary distance. The Celestials tolerate Galactus's existence as a necessary agent of cosmic balance, culling old worlds to make way for the new.
  • The Asgardians: The pantheon of Norse gods, led by Odin, has directly challenged the Celestials' authority on Earth. Their defeat during the Third Host was a humbling lesson for the sky-fathers, proving that even the most powerful gods are insignificant next to the Celestials. This established the Celestials as a higher tier of power in the Marvel cosmic hierarchy.

This is the foundational Celestial storyline. Jack Kirby's original epic culminates in the arrival of the Fourth Host, led by Arishem, to pass judgment on Earth. The story established their immense power and inscrutable nature. The conflict was not a simple battle of good vs. evil, but a confrontation with an overwhelming, indifferent force. Key moments include Thor's failed assault on the Celestials, Odin's heroic but futile stand in the Destroyer armor, and Gaea's ultimate appeal on behalf of her “children.” The judgment in favor of humanity set the stage for Earth's central role in cosmic affairs.

In this modern re-imagining by Neil Gaiman and John Romita Jr., the Celestial Tiamut, who had been dormant under the Earth, begins to awaken. It is revealed that Tiamut was imprisoned by his brethren for committing the sin of killing another Celestial and for opposing their grand design. His awakening threatens to destroy the world from within. This story delved into the internal politics and morality of the Celestials themselves, showing they were not a monolith. It humanized them to a degree, suggesting they were capable of doubt, betrayal, and perhaps even error.

Jason Aaron's run on Avengers radically re-contextualized the Celestials' connection to Earth. It was revealed that one million years ago, a sick and dying Celestial (The Progenitor) fell to Earth. Its cosmic blood and vomit became the primordial soup from which all of Earth's super-powered potential—mutants, mutates, and mystics—arose. A group of “Dark Celestials,” long-thought-dead Celestials who had been corrupted by the Horde, arrive on Earth as the “Final Host” to cleanse their shame and destroy the planet. This story positioned Earth not just as an experiment, but as a unique, “diseased” world from the Celestials' perspective, directly linking their legacy to the origin of heroes like the Avengers.

  • Earth X (Earth-9997): This dystopian future presents one of the most compelling alternate takes on the Celestials. In this reality, Celestials are born by implanting an “egg” into the core of a planet. They then manipulate the planet's dominant species, imbuing them with superpowers, which act as a planetary “immune system” to protect the gestating Celestial. Once the Celestial is born, the planet is destroyed. This concept heavily influenced the plot of the MCU's Eternals film.
  • The Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610): The Celestials in the Ultimate Universe are vastly different. They are portrayed as silent, golden-armored beings who work in concert with the Gah Lak Tus swarm (that universe's version of Galactus). They appear to act as cosmic architects or heralds, terraforming worlds for the swarm to consume, a significant departure from their role as genetic experimenters.
  • Marvel Cinematic Universe (Earth-199999): As detailed throughout this entry, the MCU version represents the most significant and popular adaptation. By tying the Celestials' purpose to a clear, understandable (if terrifying) biological imperative—reproduction—the MCU made their threat more personal and their motivations less abstract for a mainstream film audience.

1)
The visual design of the Celestials, particularly their towering, silent presence, is often cited as a visual inspiration for, or parallel to, the “Space Jockey” Engineer species seen in Ridley Scott's 1979 film Alien.
2)
In the comics, Ego the Living Planet was never a Celestial. He was an “Elder of the Universe” who was created when a scientist merged with his own planet. His re-classification as a Celestial is a unique creation for the MCU, likely done to streamline cosmic lore and give Peter Quill a more significant heritage.
3)
Despite their immense power, the Celestials are not omnipotent. They have been challenged and even defeated by entities like the Beyonders, the Horde, and beings wielding the full power of the Infinity Gauntlet or the Phoenix Force.
4)
The concept of the “First Firmament” and the Celestial civil war was introduced relatively recently by writer Al Ewing in his Ultimates series, providing a deep, complex origin story for a race that had been shrouded in mystery for over 40 years.
5)
Scathan the Approver's most famous appearance was during a storyline where the cosmic entity Protege claimed to be the One-Above-All. The Living Tribunal convened a trial, and Scathan simply gave a “thumbs down,” which was all that was needed to signal Protege's doom and validate the Tribunal's judgment.