celestial

The Celestials

  • Core Identity: The Celestials are an ancient race of incomprehensibly powerful, giant cosmic “space gods” responsible for vast genetic experiments on nascent lifeforms across the universe, creating evolutionary offshoots like the Eternals and Deviants, and periodically returning to judge whether their creations are worthy of survival.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: They are the arbiters of cosmic evolution and judgment. Acting as cosmic gardeners, they seed potential in worlds and return after eons to pass judgment, either allowing the civilization to flourish and “ascend” or eradicating it entirely with beings like Exitar the Exterminator. Their motives are enigmatic and operate on a scale far beyond mortal comprehension. cosmic_entities.
  • Primary Impact: Their most significant influence on Earth was the genetic tampering of early humanity, which not only created the god-like Eternals and monstrous Deviants but also secretly implanted the latent “X-Gene,” the very source of mutant powers that would emerge millennia later. Their periodic visits, known as “Hosts,” have shaped human history from the shadows.
  • Key Incarnations: In the comics (earth_616), they are mysterious judges of evolution whose true purpose is a cosmic mystery. In the MCU, their purpose is explicitly defined: they seed planets with life to cultivate enough energy to birth a new Celestial from the planet's core, destroying the host world in a process called the “Emergence.”

The Celestials first appeared in The Eternals #1 in July 1976. They were conceived and brought to life by the legendary “King of Comics,” Jack Kirby, upon his return to Marvel Comics in the mid-1970s. Kirby, drawing from his fascination with ancient astronaut theories, Erich von Däniken's Chariots of the Gods?, and grand biblical epics, envisioned the Celestials as the ultimate expression of cosmic mystery and power. They were designed to be figures of awe and terror—silent, impossibly large, and visually distinct armored giants whose actions were as inscrutable as they were world-shattering. Kirby intended for The Eternals saga, and by extension the Celestials, to exist in its own separate continuity. However, following the series' cancellation and Kirby's departure, writers Roy Thomas and Mark Gruenwald integrated these cosmic beings into the mainstream Marvel Universe in Thor #283 (1979), establishing them as a foundational element of Marvel's cosmic lore, a status they have held ever since.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Celestials is one of the most profound and frequently retconned mysteries in the Marvel Universe. What was once an unknowable truth has been expanded upon significantly, revealing a history tied to the very first iteration of reality.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The most recently established origin story traces the Celestials back to the very first universe, the First Firmament. This primordial, sentient universe was alone and desired companionship, so it created life: the dark and malleable Aspirants, and the brightly colored, diverse Celestials. The Celestials, unlike the sycophantic Aspirants who wished only to serve the First Firmament, believed that life should be allowed to evolve, change, and die—a concept their creator found abhorrent. This ideological schism led to a cataclysmic cosmic war. The Celestials created colossal armor and weapons, far beyond anything the Aspirants could conceive. The climax of this war was the deployment of a weapon so powerful that it shattered the First Firmament. The fractured pieces of this first reality coalesced into a new, revolutionary concept: the Multiverse. The core, surviving essence of the First Firmament was imprisoned outside the new Multiverse, plotting its revenge. The victorious Celestials became the progenitors of life as it is now known. They began their vast, cosmic-scale mission: to travel the Multiverse, find planets with the potential for life, and cultivate it. Their primary experiment involved creating three distinct genetic lines from the dominant species:

  • The Eternals: Genetically stable, long-lived, and powerful beings, designed to protect the “main” evolutionary path.
  • The Deviants: Genetically unstable beings with unpredictable mutations, representing rapid, chaotic change.
  • The Mainline Species: The majority of the species, left with latent potential for change, which in humanity's case, became the X-Gene.

A pivotal, yet tragic, event in their early history involved a Celestial known as the Progenitor. Infected by the alien Horde while traveling through deep space, the Progenitor fell to Earth billions of years ago. Its death and decaying cosmic blood and flesh became a primordial soup that profoundly altered Earth's evolutionary trajectory, making it a unique hotbed for super-powered beings. It was the Progenitor's presence that later drew other Celestials to Earth for their “Hosts,” or judgment periods.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU provides a more streamlined and concrete origin for the Celestials, as detailed primarily in the film Eternals (2021). Within this continuity, the Celestials are the first and oldest form of life in the universe. They are primordial beings who bring light, gravity, heat, and matter into existence, creating stars, galaxies, and eventually, life itself. Their purpose, as explained by the Prime Celestial, Arishem the Judge, is fundamentally tied to their own procreation. Celestials require immense amounts of energy to be born. To achieve this, they “seed” suitable planets with a Celestial embryo deep within the planetary core. They then populate the planet with life and create the Eternals—synthetic, programmed beings—to protect the burgeoning intelligent life from apex predators, specifically the Deviants (who were an earlier creation that went rogue and began preying on intelligent life instead of just predators). The Eternals' mission is to foster the growth of the planet's sentient population. Once the population reaches a certain threshold, the energy generated by their collective life force triggers the “Emergence.” This is the violent birth of the new Celestial, a process that completely consumes and destroys the host planet and its entire civilization. The energy from this one birth allows for the creation of billions of new worlds, continuing the cosmic cycle. Arishem and the others see this as a necessary, natural exchange: the destruction of one world for the creation of galaxies. This utilitarian and destructive purpose stands in stark contrast to the more mysterious, evolutionary-focused goal of their comic book counterparts.

The Celestials are defined by their incomprehensible scale, power, and inscrutable mission. While their appearance and abilities are broadly similar across continuities, their ultimate purpose differs significantly.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Celestials appear as colossal, silent, humanoid figures clad in impenetrable armor. Each Celestial has a unique design and title, reflecting their function (e.g., Arishem the Judge, Exitar the Exterminator, Gammenon the Gatherer). Their true form within the armor is a mystery, often described as pure, living energy or a “living universe.” Their average height is around 2,000 feet, but they can alter their size at will, with some like Exitar dwarfing entire planets. The armor is not merely protective; it is an instrument through which they channel and focus their cosmic energies.

The Celestials' power is nearly absolute, rivaling or exceeding that of other top-tier cosmic entities like Galactus or the abstract beings Eternity and Death.

  • Cosmic Power: They wield vast, undefined cosmic energy for a variety of effects, including reality-warping, transmutation of matter and energy, and generating forces capable of shattering planets.
  • Super-Strength & Durability: Their physical strength is immeasurable. Their armor is nigh-indestructible, capable of withstanding planetary destruction and the combined assaults of entire pantheons of gods, such as the Asgardians and Olympians. Even Odin, wielding the Destroyer Armor and the Odin-Sword, could barely scratch them.
  • Genetic Manipulation: Their most notable skill is their mastery over genetics on a cosmic scale. They can rewrite the DNA of an entire species with a gesture, implanting latent potential that can take millennia to manifest.
  • Omniscience (Limited): While not truly omniscient, their awareness spans galaxies and millennia. They can perceive multiple timelines and probabilities.
  • Immortality: The Celestials do not age and are functionally immortal. While they can be killed, it requires power on a multiversal scale, such as that wielded by the Beyonders or a fully-powered Apocalypse wielding their own technology.

The Celestials' primary interaction with Earth is through their periodic visits, known as the “Hosts.”

  • The First Host (1,000,000 B.C.): The Celestials arrived and experimented on early humanity, creating the Eternals, Deviants, and implanting the X-Gene. This is also when they battled and defeated the fallen Progenitor's Avengers of 1,000,000 B.C.
  • The Second Host (c. 23,000 B.C.): Arriving to check on their experiments, they found the Deviants had created a vast, global empire. In response, the Celestials devastated their capital, Lemuria, causing the “Great Cataclysm” that sank it and Atlantis beneath the waves.
  • The Third Host (c. 1,000 A.D.): The Celestials landed in the Andes Mountains. They made a pact with the sky-gods of Earth (Odin of Asgard, Zeus of Olympus, etc.) that the gods would not interfere with the Celestials' plans for humanity for 1,000 years, at which point the Celestials would return for their final judgment.
  • The Fourth Host (Modern Era): Arishem the Judge and the Fourth Host arrived as promised to judge humanity. They were confronted by Thor, the Eternals, and Odin in the Destroyer Armor. Despite their power, Earth's defenders were no match. Ultimately, the Earth was judged worthy of survival only after the goddess Gaea presented the “Young Gods,” twelve perfect human specimens representing humanity's ultimate potential.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU Celestials are visually similar to their comic counterparts—vast, armored beings with unique designs. However, their internal nature is shown more explicitly. They are living, biological beings with a metallic, armored exterior that appears to be part of their body. The birth of Tiamut from Earth's core showed a Celestial in its “raw” form, with hands and a head emerging from the planet's mantle. Knowhere, the severed head of a Celestial, is a biological location where organic material is mined. Their scale is immense, with Arishem being shown as large enough to dwarf planets.

Their powers are focused on creation and destruction on a galactic scale.

  • Cosmic Energy Manipulation: They can manipulate matter and energy to create stars, galaxies, and life itself. Arishem casually creates portals across vast distances and can project energy beams of incredible power. Eson the Searcher was shown wiping out the surface of a planet with a single touch of his staff containing the Power Stone.
  • Creation of Life: Their primary “power” is their ability to create artificial beings like the Eternals and Deviants, programming them with specific directives and memories.
  • Telepathic Communication: Arishem communicates with the Eternals across the universe via a powerful form of telepathy, projecting his consciousness and imagery directly into their minds.
  • Memory Manipulation: Arishem reveals that the Eternals' memories are wiped and reset after each successful Emergence, demonstrating his ability to manipulate minds on a fundamental level.

Unlike the comics' focus on evolutionary potential, the MCU Celestials' purpose is a clear, brutal cycle of procreation.

  1. Seeding: A Celestial embryo is placed in a planet's core.
  2. Cultivation: The Eternals are sent to protect the planet's intelligent life from Deviants.
  3. Growth: The planet's population must grow to a sufficient level to provide the energy for the birth.
  4. Emergence: The new Celestial is born, destroying the planet.
  5. Creation: The energy from one Emergence is used to create billions of new suns and worlds, perpetuating the cycle.

This mission is presented as a cosmic necessity, beyond good and evil. For Arishem, the sacrifice of one planet and its civilization is a small price to pay for the creation of new galaxies. This purpose is what the MCU's Eternals ultimately rebelled against, choosing to save humanity at the cost of Tiamut's birth.

  • The Aspirants: In the comics, the Aspirants were the Celestials' dark brethren and first foes. Created by the First Firmament, they desired only stasis and servitude. Their war against the Celestials was what shattered the first universe and created the multiverse.
  • The Watchers: While the Celestials are agents of change and intervention, the Watchers are sworn to a sacred vow of non-interference. They observe the universe's greatest moments but are forbidden to act. This philosophical difference puts them at odds, though they rarely come into direct conflict. Uatu the Watcher has observed the Celestials' judgments with great trepidation.
  • Galactus, the Devourer of Worlds: Galactus and the Celestials operate on a similar cosmic scale, but their purposes are different. Galactus is a force of cosmic balance, a predator necessary to keep certain cosmic powers in check. They have clashed, and while a single Celestial is a match for Galactus, their combined might is one of the few forces he truly fears.
  • The Horde: The Horde is the cosmic locust, the antithesis to the Celestials' role as “gardeners.” They are an insectoid plague of cosmic darkness that moves from world to world, consuming everything. It was the Horde that infected the Progenitor, leading to its death on Earth and inadvertently seeding the planet with its power. The Final Host of the Celestials that attacked Earth in recent years were Dark Celestials, twisted and corrupted by the Horde.
  • The Beyonders: Beings from outside the multiverse, the Beyonders are perhaps the only race shown to be definitively superior to the Celestials. During the “Time Runs Out” storyline leading to Secret Wars (2015), the Beyonders conducted an experiment to kill all the Celestials across the entire multiverse, and they succeeded, slaughtering them with ease.
  • God Pantheons: The Celestials view the Sky-Fathers of Earth, like Odin and Zeus, as little more than advanced natives. During the Third Host, they commanded the gods not to interfere with humanity's evolution. Odin's later defiance during the Fourth Host, even when empowered by all of Asgard, was utterly futile and served only to demonstrate the chasm in their power levels.
  • The Eternals: Their “successful” creation. Designed to be beautiful, powerful, and immortal defenders of Earth. In the comics, they are a biological offshoot of humanity. In the MCU, they are synthetic constructs with a specific mission. In both versions, they live with the burden of their creators' purpose.
  • The Deviants: Their “failed” creation. Genetically unstable, their forms constantly mutate, leading to monstrous appearances. They are a chaotic force, often warring with the Eternals and humanity. In the MCU, they were originally designed to clear planets of predators but evolved beyond their programming and became a threat themselves.
  • Humanity (and the X-Gene): Humanity is the mainline experiment. The Celestials' greatest secret on Earth was implanting the latent gene for mutation, the X-Gene. They saw mutation as the key to humanity's ultimate evolutionary potential, the very thing they would one day return to judge. This makes the Celestials the ultimate, indirect creators of all mutants.

The Eternals Saga & The Fourth Host

Jack Kirby's original epic and its follow-up in the pages of Thor stand as the definitive Celestial story. When Arishem the Judge and the Fourth Host arrived on Earth, it was an extinction-level event. The story established their immense power by showing them effortlessly swatting away the combined might of Thor, the Eternals, and the Asgardian Destroyer armor. The conflict was not resolved through force, but by an appeal from Gaea, the spirit of Earth, who presented twelve of humanity's best as proof of their potential. This story cemented the Celestials as an unstoppable force of nature that cannot be fought, only reasoned with.

The Celestials' Dream & The X-Gene

In the X-Factor comics, it was revealed that the Dreaming Celestial, Tiamut the Communicator, had been sealed beneath San Francisco. When he awoke, it was revealed that the Celestials were not just judging humanity's morality, but their genetic progress. The proliferation of mutants was a sign that their experiment was bearing fruit, and beings like Apocalypse and Mister Sinister spent their long lives trying to understand and control this Celestial-mandated evolution. This storyline fundamentally linked the Celestials to the entire X-Men mythos.

The Final Host & The Avengers of 1,000,000 B.C.

In Jason Aaron's Avengers run, the entire origin of superheroes on Earth was retconned to be a direct result of the fallen Progenitor. The arrival of the “Final Host,” a group of Dark Celestials infected by the Horde, forced a new team of Avengers to assemble. This story revealed that the first team of Avengers was a prehistoric group (led by Odin) that fought the maddened Progenitor when it first fell to Earth. The modern Avengers ultimately defeated the Final Host by uniting their powers and reanimating the corpse of the Progenitor as their own base of operations, now known as Avengers Mountain.

Perhaps the most radical re-imagining of the Celestials comes from the Earth X trilogy. In this reality, the Celestials are not “gardeners” of life, but cosmic midwives. Their true purpose is to protect planets that contain a Celestial embryo in their core. They manipulate the dominant species on the planet, giving them superpowers (in Earth's case, via the Terrigen Mists) to act as a planetary immune system, protecting the gestating Celestial within. It is revealed that Earth's embryo will one day be born as Galactus, who will then travel the cosmos consuming planets to prevent other Celestial embryos from hatching, thus preserving the universal balance. This brilliantly inverted the classic 616 dynamic.

The Celestials of the Ultimate Universe are significantly different and less prominent. They are not explicitly linked to the creation of mutants or other super-races. Their primary role is tied to the cosmic entity Gah Lak Tus, an intelligent, planet-devouring swarm of robots. The Celestials are portrayed as a rival alien race who created a doomsday weapon, the “Ultimate Nullifier,” to combat Gah Lak Tus.

As detailed extensively above, the MCU version represents the most significant mainstream adaptation. By giving them a clear, tangible, and destructive purpose (the Emergence), the MCU grounds their motivations in a way the comics deliberately avoid. This change makes them more direct antagonists for a film narrative, trading cosmic mystery for a more understandable, if terrifying, cosmic imperative.


1)
The name “Celestial” is derived from the Latin caelestis, meaning “heavenly” or “of the sky.
2)
Jack Kirby's original character designs for the Celestials were inspired by the Moai statues of Easter Island and the monumental scale of ancient mythologies.
3)
In the comics, the Dreaming Celestial, Tiamut, was judged a traitor by Arishem for siding with the Deviants and was imprisoned beneath the Diablo Mountains in California for millennia. He was eventually awoken and, after a period of conflict, became a silent, passive guardian of San Francisco.
4)
The film Guardians of the Galaxy (2014) provided the first major introduction of the Celestials to the MCU, showing footage of Eson the Searcher using the Power Stone to judge a planet and introducing the mining colony of Knowhere, the severed head of an ancient Celestial.
5)
The known blood color of a Celestial is a vibrant yellow-gold, as seen from the Progenitor in the comics and from the mining operations on Knowhere in the MCU.
6)
Source Material: Eternals Vol. 1 (1976) by Jack Kirby, Thor #283-301 (1979-1980) by Roy Thomas & Mark Gruenwald, Avengers Vol. 8 (2018) by Jason Aaron.