Atlantis Attacks

  • Core Identity: A sprawling 1989 Marvel Comics crossover event, Atlantis Attacks chronicles the elaborate scheme by the Deviant Priestlord Ghaur and the Atlantean Llyra to resurrect their dark god, Set, by sacrificing seven of Earth's most powerful superheroines.
  • Key Takeaways:
    • Role in the Universe: Atlantis Attacks was the centerpiece of Marvel's 1989 annuals, a massive, multi-part storyline that forcibly united disparate corners of the Marvel Universe—from the avengers and fantastic_four to the x-men and spider-man—against a world-ending mystical threat.
    • Primary Impact: The event is best remembered for its ambitious scope, its focus on the powerful female characters chosen as the “Brides of Set,” and its deep dive into the lore of the serpent_crown, the Deviants, and the malevolent Elder God Set. While its long-term status quo changes were minimal, it remains a significant example of the late-80s crossover format.
    • Key Incarnations: This event is exclusive to the Earth-616 comic book universe. The marvel_cinematic_universe has not adapted Atlantis Attacks, though the conflict between Talokan and the surface world in black_panther_wakanda_forever explores similar themes of an underwater kingdom attacking the surface, albeit for entirely different reasons and with no supernatural or cosmic elements like Set or the Serpent Crown.

Atlantis Attacks was Marvel Comics' major crossover event for the summer of 1989. Unlike previous events like secret_wars_1984 or inferno that were anchored in a central limited series, Atlantis Attacks was structured uniquely across fourteen different Marvel annuals published that year. This format created a sprawling, serialized epic that encouraged readers to purchase a wide array of titles to follow the complete narrative. The story was primarily conceived and plotted by Mark Gruenwald and Peter Sanderson, with various writers and artists contributing to their respective annuals. The event's narrative was divided into two parts within each annual: the main story, which advanced the core plot of Ghaur and Llyra's scheme, and a serialized backup story titled “The Serpent Crown Saga.” This backup feature, written by Peter Sanderson with art by Mark Bagley, provided crucial exposition, detailing the long and sordid history of the serpent_crown and the influence of Set throughout human history. This dual-narrative structure was innovative, using the backup pages to enrich the main plot and connect dots for readers who might not be familiar with the deep lore of characters like namor_the_sub-mariner or the Deviants. The crossover was a massive logistical undertaking, requiring coordination across the editorial offices of The Avengers, Fantastic Four, Spider-Man, and the X-Men. Its title, Atlantis Attacks, is somewhat of a misnomer; while the conflict involves Atlanteans (specifically the forces of Llyra and Attuma), the central threat is the pan-universal ambition of Ghaur and the cosmic horror of Set, with Atlantis serving more as a base of operations and a source of manpower than the sole antagonistic force.

In-Universe Origin Story

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The in-universe origins of the Atlantis Attacks conflict trace back to the separate defeats of two major villains: Ghaur, the ambitious priest-lord of the Deviants of Lemuria, and Llyra, a deadly Lemurian/Atlantean hybrid and a sworn enemy of Namor. Following his defeat by the eternals and thor during a plot to challenge the Celestials, Ghaur's physical body was destroyed, but his consciousness endured. Similarly, Llyra, a master of political intrigue and biological manipulation, had been presumed dead after past conflicts with Namor and spider-woman. The two disembodied villains formed a pact in the astral plane, their shared ambition and lust for power uniting them. Their goal was nothing short of divine: to summon the elder serpent god Set back to the Earth dimension, an act that would grant them god-like power and reshape the world in their image. To accomplish this, they needed two key components: a massive source of power and a physical conduit for Set to enter Earth. The power source was the serpent_crown, an ancient and corrupting artifact created by Set's followers. To secure it, Ghaur and Llyra manipulated the barbarian warlord Attuma into leading a massive assault on the surface world, providing the “Atlantis Attacks” of the title. This widespread conflict served as a grand distraction, allowing their primary plan to proceed unnoticed. The second component was the creation of a suitable vessel for Set's consciousness. Their plan involved a dark ritual requiring seven “brides”—super-powered women of Earth who possessed specific genetic or mystical qualities. They systematically targeted and captured:

  • Andromeda: An Atlantean noblewoman and former member of the Defenders.
  • She-Hulk (Jennifer Walters): Chosen for her gamma-irradiated physiology.
  • Storm (Ororo Munroe): Her elemental control and semi-divine potential made her a prime target.
  • Jean Grey (Marvel Girl): Her immense psionic power as a host of the Phoenix Force was coveted.
  • The Scarlet Witch (Wanda Maximoff): Her reality-altering chaos magic was essential to the ritual.
  • Dagger (Tandy Bowen): Her connection to the Lightforce dimension offered a unique form of energy.
  • The Invisible Woman (Sue Storm): Her ability to manipulate cosmic-ray-derived energy fields was the final piece.

With the brides assembled and the world's heroes occupied by Attuma's global assault, Ghaur and Llyra began their ritual in the ruins of undersea Lemuria, using a new, giant Serpent Crown as a focal point to bring their dark god to Earth.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The Atlantis Attacks storyline, as it exists in the comics, has not occurred and does not exist in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The key villains (Ghaur, Llyra, Set), the central artifact (the Serpent Crown), and the specific plot involving the “Brides of Set” are all absent from the MCU canon. However, the core theme of an advanced, isolationist underwater civilization launching an attack on the surface world is central to the plot of black_panther_wakanda_forever. In the MCU, the kingdom is named Talokan, not Atlantis, and its people are descendants of a Mesoamerican tribe who were transformed by a vibranium-infused underwater plant. Their leader, Namor, is depicted as a mutant with superhuman abilities and a centuries-long lifespan, driven by a fierce, trauma-informed desire to protect his people from the surface world that he believes will inevitably seek to exploit them. Key Differences and Adaptational Analysis:

  • Motivation: The comic book “attack” is a feint orchestrated by villains to distract from a mystical plot. In the MCU, the conflict is politically and ideologically driven. Namor's attacks are a direct, preemptive response to the surface world's hunt for vibranium, which he views as an existential threat to Talokan.
  • Antagonist: The MCU's Namor is a complex anti-villain, a tragic king whose motivations are understandable, even if his methods are extreme. The comic's plot is driven by the unambiguously evil Ghaur and Llyra, who desire pure power and worship a demonic entity.
  • Nature of the Threat: The Earth-616 threat is supernatural and cosmic, involving ancient gods and powerful magic. The MCU threat is geopolitical and technological, revolving around control of the rare resource, vibranium.
  • The Kingdom: Atlantis in the comics is a society of Homo mermanus, a divergent offshoot of humanity. The MCU's Talokan has a specific, grounded origin tied to Mayan culture and the unique properties of a single vibranium meteorite.

While the MCU could potentially adapt a storyline titled “Atlantis Attacks” in the future, it would almost certainly be a spiritual successor to the conflict seen in Wakanda Forever, focusing on the political tensions between Talokan, Wakanda, and other surface nations, rather than the mystical, god-summoning plot of the 1989 comic event.

Timeline of the Crossover Event

The Atlantis Attacks event unfolded chronologically across fourteen annuals, forming a cohesive, novel-like narrative.

  • Prologue (Silver Surfer Annual #2): The disembodied spirits of Ghaur and Llyra forge their alliance. They manipulate a clone of abomination to attack Atlantis, creating chaos that allows them to possess the bodies of two of Attuma's loyalists, Tyrak and Krang.
  • The Global Offensive Begins (Iron Man Annual #10, X-Men Annual #13): Ghaur and Llyra, now in physical forms, offer Attuma a deal: they will help him conquer the surface world in exchange for his armies. Attuma agrees, launching a multi-pronged assault. Simultaneously, Ghaur's Deviant forces begin abducting the chosen “brides.” They capture Andromeda and manipulate the X-Men's foe Mister Sinister into delivering a clone of Jean Grey.
  • The Brides are Taken (The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #23, The Punisher Annual #2, Spectacular Spider-Man Annual #9, Daredevil Annual #5): The villains' forces continue their kidnappings. Dagger is taken during a battle alongside Spider-Man and the Punisher. A mind-controlled Quicksilver is used to capture his sister, the Scarlet Witch. She-Hulk is subdued by the U-Foes. The Invisible Woman is captured after a grueling battle with mutated sea creatures at the Fantastic Four's headquarters.
  • The Heroes Respond (Avengers Annual #18, New Mutants Annual #5, X-Factor Annual #4, Web of Spider-Man Annual #5, West Coast Avengers Annual #4): The scale of the crisis becomes clear. The Avengers, x-factor, and other heroes battle Attuma's forces on multiple fronts. doctor_strange senses the immense mystical disturbance and begins to investigate. Namor, learning of the plot against both his kingdom and the surface, reluctantly allies with Earth's heroes to hunt down Ghaur and Llyra. Spider-Man teams up with the Fantastic Four to rescue Sue Storm.
  • The Ritual and Climax (Thor Annual #14, Fantastic Four Annual #22): All seven brides are brought to the sunken city of Lemuria. Ghaur begins the ritual to summon Set, using the new, colossal Serpent Crown as a conduit. As the heroes converge on their location, Set's seven-headed form begins to manifest on Earth, with each head possessing the power and essence of one of the brides. A desperate, final battle ensues. The combined might of Thor, the Fantastic Four, the Avengers, and Namor's Atlantean loyalists isn't enough to physically stop Set. The solution comes from the brides themselves; Jean Grey psionically links them, and the Scarlet Witch's chaos magic, amplified by the others, disrupts the dimensional gateway. This forces Set's consciousness out but tragically turns the brides into monstrous versions of his avatars.
  • Resolution: In the final moments, the god-slaying Demogorge, summoned by Thor, is about to destroy the transformed brides. However, Doctor Strange and Henry Pym devise a scientific and mystical solution to purge Set's influence, reverting the heroines to their normal forms. Ghaur's physical body is vaporized in the mystical backlash, and Llyra escapes with the unconscious Attuma in the confusion.

Key Turning Points

  • The Ghaur-Llyra Alliance: The union of Deviant ambition and Atlantean cunning created a partnership capable of operating on a scale neither could achieve alone.
  • Attuma's Invasion as a Distraction: The masterstroke of the plan was using a massive, conventional war to mask their true, world-ending mystical objective. This effectively divided the attention of Earth's heroes.
  • The Capture of the Seven Brides: The success of this phase was critical. Each heroine brought a unique energy signature necessary for the ritual, and their removal from the battlefield deprived the heroes of powerful allies.
  • Namor's Alliance with the Surface: The Sub-Mariner's decision to fight alongside his traditional adversaries was crucial in locating the villains' base and leading the final assault.
  • The Brides' Final Gambit: The heroes could not defeat Set by force. It was the combined power and ingenuity of the captured women, acting in concert from within Set's very being, that ultimately severed his connection to Earth.

Aftermath

Despite its grand scale, the aftermath of Atlantis Attacks resulted in a relatively soft reset of the status quo.

  • Fate of the Villains: Ghaur was believed destroyed, his consciousness scattered, though he would eventually reform years later. Llyra escaped and remained a recurring foe for Namor. Attuma was left in a coma, temporarily removing him as a threat to Atlantis.
  • Impact on Atlantis: With Attuma incapacitated, Namor's claim to the throne of Atlantis was strengthened. The event did little to improve long-term relations between Atlantis and the surface, as the widespread destruction was blamed on Atlanteans in general, not the specific faction led by Attuma.
  • The Serpent Crown: The giant crown used in the ritual was destroyed, but the original, smaller crown was shown to have survived, ensuring its potential return as a future plot device.
  • The Heroines: The “Brides of Set” were successfully restored to normal with no lasting physical transformations. The psychological trauma of their experience was occasionally referenced but rarely became a central character point in their respective series.
  • Legacy: Atlantis Attacks is often viewed as a quintessential example of the “annual crossover” event. While entertaining and ambitious, its sprawling nature and lack of a central miniseries have made it less iconic and impactful than events like crisis_on_infinite_earths at DC or even Marvel's own secret_wars_1984. Its primary lasting contribution was the significant lore-building around Set and the Serpent Crown.
  • Ghaur: The ambitious and arrogant High Priest of the Deviants of Lemuria. Ghaur is a master manipulator and a powerful psychic. Unlike other Deviants who seek only to conquer humanity, Ghaur's ambition is cosmic. He sees the Celestials—the space gods who created his race—as his true adversaries. His plan to summon Set was not just about ruling Earth, but about acquiring a power great enough to challenge the gods themselves.
  • Llyra: A formidable villainess with a complex heritage, being a hybrid of a water-breathing Atlantean and an air-breathing Lemurian. This gives her the unique ability to change her skin color from blue to flesh-toned and survive in both environments indefinitely. A powerful sorceress and master of disguise, Llyra's primary motivation is a deep-seated hatred for Namor and a lust for the Atlantean throne. Her alliance with Ghaur was one of pure convenience to achieve her goals.
  • Set the Elder God: The ultimate antagonist of the saga. Set is one of Earth's most ancient and malevolent beings, an entity of pure chaos and corruption. He was banished from Earth's dimension eons ago by the Demogorge but has consistently sought to return through the manipulation of his followers and the power of his artifact, the Serpent Crown. His goal is simple and absolute: to consume all of reality.

The seven heroines were specifically chosen to serve as the physical and spiritual anchors for Set's seven heads, each corresponding to a specific aspect of his being.

  • Andromeda: Represented the link to the undersea races Set wished to dominate first.
  • She-Hulk: Her gamma-powered strength represented the raw physical power Set would wield.
  • Storm: Her command over the planet's weather patterns represented control over the natural world.
  • Jean Grey: Her Omega-level telepathy and telekinesis represented mastery over thought and matter.
  • Scarlet Witch: Her unique chaos magic was the key to bending reality and opening the portal for his arrival.
  • Dagger: Her pure light-based energy represented the life force Set intended to consume.
  • Invisible Woman: Her ability to generate psionic force fields represented the power to create and destroy on a cosmic scale.

Virtually every active hero in the Marvel Universe at the time was involved in fighting back the global invasion by Attuma's forces.

  • Namor: As the Prince of Atlantis, this was a deeply personal conflict. He was instrumental in turning the tide, leading his loyalist factions against Attuma and guiding the surface heroes to Ghaur and Llyra's hidden stronghold.
  • The avengers: Both the East Coast team (led by captain_america) and the West Coast team were on the front lines, battling Atlantean forces in major cities and coordinating the global defense. thor's divine power was critical in the final battle against Set's avatar.
  • The fantastic_four: Their involvement became personal with the abduction of Sue Storm. reed_richards and doctor_doom (in a temporary alliance) worked on a scientific solution, while the team was pivotal in the assault on Lemuria.
  • doctor_strange: The Sorcerer Supreme was the first to recognize the true nature of the mystical threat. He provided magical defense and was essential in both understanding the ritual and ultimately reversing its effects on the Brides.
  • The Mutant Teams (x-men, x-factor, new_mutants): With Storm and Jean Grey captured, the mutant teams were highly motivated. They fought off Atlantean invaders and participated in the final rescue mission.

Part 5: Core Story Arcs & Tie-In Issues

The main plot of Atlantis Attacks is contained within the lead stories of the 14 participating 1989 annuals. The correct reading order is essential to understanding the narrative flow.

Chapter Title Issue