Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack 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. ====== Dark Reign ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: In the aftermath of a devastating alien invasion, the world's greatest villain, Norman Osborn, manipulated his way into becoming its greatest hero, ushering in an era where supervillains held the reins of global power under the guise of law and order.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** The Dark Reign was a year-long, line-wide status quo shift in the [[marvel_comics|Marvel Universe]], fundamentally inverting the traditional hero/villain dynamic. It served as the dark, twisted reflection of the post-[[civil_war_comics|Civil War]] "Initiative" era, replacing [[shield|S.H.I.E.L.D.]] with the corrupt [[hammer|H.A.M.M.E.R.]] and the [[avengers|Avengers]] with Osborn's own team of villains in disguise. * **Primary Impact:** Its most significant influence was the exploration of themes like public perception, media manipulation, and the nature of heroism when the legal authority is corrupt. It elevated [[norman_osborn]] from a top-tier Spider-Man foe to a global-level threat and directly led to the climactic [[siege_comics|Siege of Asgard]], which shattered this dark mirror and re-established a more traditional heroic age. * **Key Incarnations:** The Dark Reign is an event exclusively rooted in the [[earth_616|Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)]]. The Marvel Cinematic Universe has explored thematically similar concepts, such as government oversight in `[[captain_america_civil_war|Captain America: Civil War]]` and the formation of a government-sanctioned team of former antagonists in the upcoming `[[thunderbolts_mcu|Thunderbolts]]` film, but a direct adaptation of Norman Osborn's rise to global power has not occurred. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The "Dark Reign" banner began to appear on Marvel Comics titles in December 2008, following the conclusion of the major crossover event `[[secret_invasion]]`. While not a single, self-contained miniseries like its predecessors `Civil War` and `Secret Invasion`, it was an overarching branding and storyline that affected nearly every Marvel title for the entirety of 2009 and into early 2010. The architect of this era was writer [[brian_michael_bendis]], who was helming the core `Avengers` titles at the time. The conceptual seed was planted in the finale of `Secret Invasion`, where Norman Osborn, the supposedly reformed Green Goblin, fired the kill shot that took down the Skrull Queen Veranke on live television. This single, public act transformed one of the world's most notorious villains into a global hero. Bendis, along with other key Marvel creators like Ed Brubaker, Matt Fraction, and Jonathan Hickman, explored the logical, terrifying fallout of this event. The core narrative was primarily driven by several key series: * `Dark Avengers`, written by Bendis with art by Mike Deodato Jr., served as the flagship title, chronicling the missions of Osborn's handpicked team of villains. * `New Avengers`, also by Bendis, followed the fugitive heroes led by Luke Cage and Captain America who refused to accept Osborn's rule. * `Secret Warriors`, by Jonathan Hickman, detailed Nick Fury's clandestine war against both Osborn's H.A.M.M.E.R. and the secret deep-state power of [[hydra|Hydra]]. * Various other titles, from `The Mighty Thor` to `Invincible Iron Man` and the `X-Men` line, were deeply impacted, showcasing how different corners of the Marvel Universe reacted to a world run by villains. The era concluded with the miniseries `Siege`, again by Bendis, which served as the violent, explosive finale to Osborn's reign. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The genesis of the Dark Reign lies in the catastrophic failure of the superhuman community during the [[secret_invasion|Skrull Secret Invasion]]. The Skrulls, a race of alien shapeshifters, had spent years systematically replacing key figures in government, technology, and superhero teams, culminating in a full-scale assault on Earth. The Director of S.H.I.E.L.D., [[tony_stark|Tony Stark]], was publicly blamed for this infiltration. His own StarkTech technology, which formed the backbone of global security, was compromised by a Skrull virus, rendering it useless. The world's heroes were fractured, distrustful, and unable to mount a coordinated defense. In the final battle in New York's Central Park, the Skrulls were on the verge of victory. Just as Skrull Queen Veranke (disguised as Spider-Woman) was about to deliver a killing blow, [[norman_osborn|Norman Osborn]], then leading the government-sanctioned [[thunderbolts|Thunderbolts]], arrived. In a moment broadcast to the entire world, Osborn aimed a stolen piece of advanced weaponry and vaporized the Queen. This single act was a masterstroke of public relations. The world didn't see the insane Green Goblin; they saw the man who succeeded where Tony Stark had failed. They saw the decisive leader who ended the war. In the immediate aftermath, the President of the United States, facing immense political pressure, made a series of sweeping changes. Tony Stark was stripped of his position and branded an international fugitive for his perceived incompetence. S.H.I.E.L.D. was dismantled entirely. In its place, the President handed the keys to the entire global security apparatus to the one man who had delivered results: Norman Osborn. Osborn wasted no time. He rebranded S.H.I.E.L.D. into his own organization, **H.A.M.M.E.R.** (a backronym Osborn himself never bothered to define). He seized Stark's assets, including Avengers Tower, and established it as his new headquarters. Most critically, he formed his own team of "Avengers." To the public, they were heroes. In reality, they were villains and psychopaths he could control, disguised as established, beloved heroes. The Dark Reign had begun. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === A direct, one-to-one adaptation of Dark Reign does not exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Norman Osborn, the central figure of the storyline, was only introduced to the MCU in `[[spider_man_no_way_home|Spider-Man: No Way Home]]` as a variant from another universe (the Sam Raimi `Spider-Man` films), and he was ultimately cured of his Goblin persona and returned to his reality. The MCU's prime Norman Osborn has yet to be formally introduced. However, the MCU has explored several key themes and narrative components that echo the Dark Reign: * **Government Oversight and Control:** The Sokovia Accords, introduced in `[[captain_america_civil_war|Captain America: Civil War]]`, represent the MCU's primary exploration of government control over superheroes. This led to a similar schism in the hero community, with Tony Stark's pro-registration faction and Captain America's anti-registration fugitives mirroring the hero/fugitive dynamic of the Dark Reign. * **Villains as Government Agents:** The character of Valentina Allegra de Fontaine has been shown recruiting morally ambiguous figures like John Walker (U.S. Agent), Yelena Belova (Black Widow), and Taskmaster. This is leading directly to the formation of the `[[thunderbolts_mcu|Thunderbolts]]`, a government-sanctioned team of anti-heroes and former villains. This concept is a direct precursor to Dark Reign in the comics, where Osborn's Thunderbolts were the template for his Dark Avengers. * **Public Opinion and Heroic Failure:** The aftermath of `Avengers: Age of Ultron` and the events of `Civil War` show the public and world governments turning on the Avengers due to the collateral damage they cause, much like how Tony Stark was scapegoated after the Skrull Invasion. While the MCU has not had its "Dark Reign," the building blocks—distrust of heroes, government intervention, and the sanctioning of villainous operatives—are present. A future adaptation, perhaps with a different central figure than Osborn, remains a possibility within the cinematic universe. ===== Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath ===== The Dark Reign was not a single, linear event but a pervasive status quo that defined the Marvel Universe for over a year. Its "timeline" is best understood through the key pillars of Norman Osborn's power structure and the major conflicts that arose from it. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === ==== The New World Order: H.A.M.M.E.R. and the Cabal ==== Immediately upon taking power, Osborn established two primary instruments of control. * **H.A.M.M.E.R.:** This organization replaced S.H.I.E.L.D., utilizing its infrastructure but staffing it with Osborn's loyalists, many of whom were former Hydra agents or soldiers from his Thunderbolts initiative. Its public face was that of a more efficient, decisive security force, but its internal operations were brutal, corrupt, and solely dedicated to cementing Osborn's power. Victoria Hand, a pragmatic former S.H.I.E.L.D. business manager, was appointed as his deputy, often acting as a stabilizing, if morally compromised, influence. * **The Cabal:** Recognizing he couldn't control the entire super-powered world alone, Osborn secretly assembled a council of the most powerful and influential villains. This group, known as the Cabal, was a dark mirror of the superhero Illuminati. Its purpose was to carve up the world and manage their respective spheres of influence to avoid mutual destruction. The founding members were: * **Norman Osborn:** The public face and de facto leader. * **[[doctor_doom|Doctor Doom]]:** Lord of Latveria, providing magical and technological might. * **[[loki|Loki]]:** The Asgardian God of Mischief (in a female form at the time), manipulating events from the shadows for his own ends. * **[[emma_frost|Emma Frost]]:** The White Queen of the X-Men, who joined to protect the dwindling mutant population from Osborn. * **[[namor|Namor]]:** The Sub-Mariner, King of Atlantis, who joined to protect his kingdom and settle old scores. * **[[the_hood|The Hood (Parker Robbins)]]:** Leader of a vast supervillain crime syndicate, providing the Cabal with street-level muscle. The Cabal was inherently unstable, built on a foundation of mistrust and betrayal, and its eventual implosion was a key factor in Osborn's downfall. ==== The Dark Avengers: A Villainous Masquerade ==== Osborn's most brilliant move was creating a new team of Avengers to win public trust. He took existing villains and rebranded them as classic heroes, creating a powerful but psychologically unstable team. ^ **Dark Avenger** ^ **Secret Identity** ^ **Heroic Guise** ^ **Notes** ^ | ''Iron Patriot'' | Norman Osborn | [[iron_man|Iron Man]] & [[captain_america|Captain America]] | Osborn created a new suit of armor from Stark-tech, painted in the colors of the American flag, to present himself as the ultimate patriot. | | ''Spider-Man'' | Mac Gargan (Venom) | [[spider_man|Spider-Man]] | The Venom symbiote was altered with medication to more closely resemble Spider-Man's classic black suit, but Gargan's cannibalistic tendencies often broke through. | | ''Ms. Marvel'' | Karla Sofen (Moonstone) | [[captain_marvel_carol_danvers|Ms. Marvel (Carol Danvers)]] | Sofen, a master manipulator and powerhouse, took on the original costume of Carol Danvers. | | ''Hawkeye'' | Lester (Bullseye) | [[hawkeye|Hawkeye (Clint Barton)]] | The sociopathic assassin Bullseye was given Hawkeye's bow and costume. His unerring aim made him a perfect fit, but his murderous glee was a constant liability. | | ''Wolverine'' | Daken Akihiro | [[wolverine|Wolverine (Logan)]] | Wolverine's estranged, psychologically disturbed son, Daken, joined the team, relishing the chance to tarnish his father's name. | | ''Captain Marvel'' | Noh-Varr | Captain Marvel | The Kree warrior Noh-Varr briefly joined, believing Osborn's team to be legitimate, but quickly quit upon realizing the truth. | | The Sentry | Robert Reynolds | The Sentry | A hero of immense power but with a fractured psyche, controlled by a dark alter-ego called the Void. Osborn manipulated the Sentry, using him as his ultimate weapon. | | Ares | Ares | Ares | The Greek God of War had served on the Mighty Avengers and stayed on, believing Osborn was the kind of warrior-leader the world needed. He was unaware of the true villainous nature of his teammates. | This team undertook several high-profile missions, battling threats like [[morgan_le_fay|Morgan le Fay]] and stopping terrorist attacks, all while their violent methods and internal conflicts threatened to tear them apart. ==== The Resistance and the Aftermath ==== While Osborn ruled, the true heroes were branded outlaws. * The **New Avengers**, led by [[luke_cage|Luke Cage]] and operating out of Captain America's (Bucky Barnes) safe house, fought a guerilla war against Osborn's regime. * [[nick_fury|Nick Fury]] and his **Secret Warriors** waged a two-front war against H.A.M.M.E.R. and their true enemy, Baron von Strucker's Hydra. * Tony Stark, on the run, was forced to systematically erase his own mind to prevent Osborn from gaining the secrets of the Superhuman Registration Act. The Dark Reign officially ended with the **Siege of Asgard**. Manipulated by Loki, a paranoid and increasingly unhinged Osborn used a manufactured tragedy as a pretext to invade Asgard, which was then floating above Broxton, Oklahoma. This was a line he could not un-cross. The united heroes—including the recently returned Steve Rogers and a recovering Tony Stark—rallied to defend Asgard. In the ensuing battle, Osborn's madness was broadcast to the world, the Sentry's dark Void persona was unleashed and ultimately killed, and Ares was brutally murdered by the Sentry upon learning the truth. In the end, Steve Rogers and the Avengers defeated Osborn. His armor was stripped away, his reign was over, and he was arrested. The Superhuman Registration Act was repealed, and a new "Heroic Age" began, with the heroes once again celebrated by the public they had saved. ===== Part 4: Key Factions & Players ===== ==== Osborn's Regime (The Ruling Power) ==== The central faction of this era was the complex web of organizations and individuals loyal to, or controlled by, Norman Osborn. * **[[norman_osborn|Norman Osborn]]:** The supreme commander. After years of being the unhinged Green Goblin, Osborn found a new, more terrifying persona: the respected director of global security. He was cunning, charismatic, and utterly ruthless. However, the psychological pressure of his position, combined with his underlying instability, caused his Green Goblin persona to slowly re-emerge, leading to his eventual psychotic break and downfall. * **[[dark_avengers|The Dark Avengers]]:** His primary weapon for public relations and superhuman enforcement. They were a powder keg of conflicting personalities: Bullseye's psychopathy, Venom's hunger, Moonstone's ambition, and Daken's resentment were constantly at odds. Osborn barely maintained control through threats, manipulation, and liberal use of the Sentry as his ultimate deterrent. * **[[hammer|H.A.M.M.E.R.]]:** The bureaucratic and military arm of his regime. While many agents were simply soldiers or administrators doing their jobs, its leadership was corrupt, and its methods were often fascistic. Key figures like Victoria Hand attempted to bring a level of professionalism, but they were ultimately serving a madman's agenda. ==== The Cabal (The Shadow Council) ==== The Cabal was Osborn's attempt at a "league of evil," but it was doomed from the start. Its members were too powerful, proud, and treacherous to ever truly cooperate. * **[[doctor_doom|Doctor Doom]] & [[namor|Namor]]:** These two monarchs had a long and complicated history. They engaged in their own private war that destabilized the Cabal from within, viewing Osborn with contempt. * **[[emma_frost|Emma Frost]]:** A double agent from the start. She used her position to feed information to the X-Men and protect mutantkind. Her telepathic abilities allowed her to play a dangerous game, manipulating Osborn while appearing to be an ally. Her eventual defection during the "Utopia" event was a major blow to Osborn's authority. * **[[loki|Loki]]:** The ultimate wildcard. Loki's goal was the destruction and rebirth of Asgard. He manipulated Osborn at every turn, whispering in his ear and pushing him towards the eventual invasion of his home, all as part of a grand, tragic scheme. ==== The Heroic Resistance (The Fugitives) ==== Scattered and hunted, the heroes of the Marvel Universe refused to surrender to Osborn's rule. * **[[new_avengers|The New Avengers]]:** This team became the heart of the resistance. Comprised of figures like [[luke_cage|Luke Cage]], [[spider_man|Spider-Man]], [[wolverine|Wolverine]], [[spider_woman|Spider-Woman]], [[ms_marvel|Ms. Marvel]], and led spiritually by the then-current [[captain_america_bucky|Captain America (Bucky Barnes)]], they operated from the shadows, exposing Osborn's corruption and protecting civilians. * **[[nick_fury|Nick Fury]] and his Secret Warriors:** Fury, the world's greatest spymaster, had been in hiding since before the Secret Invasion. He activated a network of super-powered sleeper agents (the "Caterpillars") to form his Secret Warriors. This team, including his son Mikel Fury and the inhuman powerhouse Daisy Johnson (Quake), fought a covert war that was arguably more important than the public battles, uncovering the deep ties between H.A.M.M.E.R., S.H.I.E.L.D., and Hydra. * **[[x-men|The X-Men]]:** The mutants were a nation unto themselves. When Osborn tried to impose his will on them, they fought back, eventually creating a sovereign island nation called "Utopia" off the coast of San Francisco. This public defiance was one of the first major cracks in Osborn's armor of invincibility. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== === Dark Reign: The List === This eight-part storyline, spanning several annuals, was a critical turning point. Osborn, growing more paranoid, created a literal "list" of things he wanted to eliminate to secure his power. Each issue focused on a different target. Key events included Bullseye being sent to kill Daredevil (leading to Daredevil taking control of The Hand), Osborn's failed attempt to reclaim the Weapon X program from Wolverine, and his hunt for a powerless Tony Stark, culminating in a brutal physical beatdown of Stark by Osborn himself. "The List" was a showcase of Osborn's escalating cruelty and obsession. === Utopia === This major crossover between the `Dark X-Men` and `Uncanny X-Men` titles saw the full might of Osborn's regime brought to bear against mutantkind. Anti-mutant riots in San Francisco provided Osborn the pretext to declare martial law. He formed his own "Dark X-Men," led by Emma Frost and Namor (who were secretly working against him) and including villains like Mystique and Dagger & Cloak (who were coerced into joining). The conflict climaxed when the X-Men, using their combined powers, raised an asteroid from the ocean floor to create a new, sovereign mutant homeland they named "Utopia." Osborn was forced to retreat, suffering his first major public defeat and losing two key Cabal members (Emma and Namor) in the process. === Siege === The culmination of the entire Dark Reign saga. Loki engineered a conflict between the Asgardian Volstagg and a stadium full of people in Chicago, giving Osborn the political capital he needed to launch a full-scale invasion of Asgard. He unleashed his entire H.A.M.M.E.R. army, the Dark Avengers, and his secret weapon, the Void-controlled Sentry. The battle was cataclysmic. Asgard was toppled from the sky and destroyed. Ares, upon discovering Loki's manipulation, confronted Osborn, only to be literally torn in half by the Sentry. This horrific act, broadcast live, shattered Osborn's heroic image forever. The returned Steve Rogers, leading a unified force of all Avengers teams, finally turned the tide. The Sentry, completely consumed by the Void, was only stopped when Thor was forced to kill him, a final tragedy for a fallen hero. The event ended with Osborn's defeat and the dawn of the Heroic Age. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== As a specific, year-long status quo for Earth-616, direct variants of the "Dark Reign" are rare. However, its themes and characters have appeared in alternate contexts. * **Secret Wars (2015):** In the patchwork reality of Battleworld, the domain of Limbo was ruled by a version of Madelyne Pryor, the Goblin Queen. She led her own demonic version of the X-Men, which had a similar "villains posing as heroes" dynamic, and even had a version of the Dark Avengers as her enforcers, showcasing the lasting impact of the concept. * **What If? Dark Reign (2010):** This one-shot comic explored a chilling alternate scenario. During the climactic battle in `Siege`, the Sentry's powers are not dissipated upon his death. Instead, they transfer to the nearest vessel: the psychopathic Bullseye. The story depicts a world where an all-powerful, god-like being with the mind of a remorseless killer is let loose, resulting in a far darker and more hopeless outcome than the original event. * **Video Games (Thematic Parallels):** While not a direct adaptation, games like `Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2` adapt the `Civil War` storyline, which shares the theme of government control and hero-vs-hero conflict that set the stage for Dark Reign. The idea of playable villains and shifting allegiances in many Marvel games often touches upon the core ideas of the era. ===== See Also ===== * [[norman_osborn]] * [[secret_invasion]] * [[siege_comics]] * [[dark_avengers]] * [[hammer]] * [[thunderbolts]] * [[brian_michael_bendis]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The name H.A.M.M.E.R. was a deliberate choice by writer Brian Michael Bendis to be an undefined backronym. In `Dark Avengers #1`, Norman Osborn and Victoria Hand have a conversation where Osborn admits he hasn't even come up with what it stands for, highlighting the slapdash and image-focused nature of his new world order.)) ((The Iron Patriot armor was a stroke of branding genius by Osborn, combining the iconography of Marvel's two most trusted heroes, Iron Man and Captain America, to create a symbol the public would instinctively trust.)) ((Victoria Hand, introduced during this era, became a breakout character. Despite working for Osborn, she was portrayed as a pragmatist who genuinely believed in order and protocol. She later went on to play a significant role with the New Avengers after the fall of H.A.M.M.E.R., trying to atone for her part in the regime.)) ((The Dark Reign era was a commercial success for Marvel, with `Dark Avengers` often being one of the top-selling monthly comics. It was critically praised for its complex political themes and its compelling central idea of a world turned upside-down.)) ((The mental state of the Sentry (Robert Reynolds) was a key subplot throughout the entire era. Osborn exploited his psychological issues, promising him help while secretly feeding the power of his dark side, the Void, making him a more effective but unstable weapon. His tragic death in `Siege` was the final, devastating consequence of Osborn's manipulation.))