Empyre
Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary
- In one bolded sentence, Empyre was a 2020 Marvel Comics crossover event that saw the combined might of the Kree and Skrull empires, united under the former Young Avenger Hulkling, launch a supposed invasion of Earth, only to reveal their true target: the genocidal, plant-like Cotati who had established a foothold on the Moon with the intent to eradicate all “animal” life in the universe.
- Key Takeaways:
- Role in the Universe: Empyre serves as the climactic conclusion to the millennia-long Kree-Skrull War, the most enduring conflict in Marvel's cosmic history. It fundamentally reshapes the galactic political landscape by forging the two warring empires into a single, powerful Kree-Skrull Alliance.
- Primary Impact: The event's most significant and lasting consequence is the formal establishment of the Kree-Skrull Alliance with Emperor Dorrek VIII (Hulkling) as its ruler and Wiccan as his Prince-Consort. This created a new “superpower” faction in the cosmos and elevated two prominent Young Avengers to galactic royalty.
- Key Incarnations: Empyre is a major Earth-616 comic book event with no current adaptation in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). Its story is deeply rooted in comic-specific continuity stretching back to the 1970s, particularly the Celestial Madonna Saga and the original Kree-Skrull War.
Part 2: Origin and Evolution
Publication History and Creation
The Empyre event was the culmination of years of narrative build-up, orchestrated primarily by writers Al Ewing and Dan Slott. It was officially announced in December 2019 as Marvel's flagship summer crossover for 2020. The core creative team consisted of Ewing and Slott as co-writers, with Valerio Schiti providing the main event's dynamic and detailed artwork, and Marte Gracia as the colorist. The narrative seeds for Empyre were planted across several key titles. The one-shot Incoming! #1 (December 2019) served as the direct prologue, depicting the murder of a mysterious Kree agent and ending with Teddy Altman, a.k.a. Hulkling, accepting his destiny by taking up the Star-Sword and uniting the Kree and Skrull fleets. This followed threads from Al Ewing's work on titles like The Ultimates and Royals, which explored the deep history of the Kree. The event was designed to be a modern-day sequel to two of the most foundational stories in Marvel cosmic history: the original Kree-Skrull War (1971-1972) by Roy Thomas, Neal Adams, and John Buscema, and the Celestial Madonna Saga (1974-1975) by Steve Englehart. Empyre deliberately revisited the Cotati, the plant-like race introduced in Englehart's saga, and reframed them from peaceful victims into the story's primary antagonists. The event's release was notably impacted by the global COVID-19 pandemic, which caused a temporary shutdown of the comic book industry's distribution network. This led to a delay in its launch, with the main series eventually beginning in July 2020 instead of its originally planned April release. Despite the logistical challenges, the event ran through a six-issue core limited series, accompanied by a host of tie-in books, including one-shots and arcs in ongoing titles like Avengers, Fantastic Four, and X-Men.
The Precipice of War: The In-Universe Build-Up
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
The in-universe origins of Empyre are a complex tapestry woven from galactic history spanning millennia. The central conflict is a three-way struggle between the Kree, the Skrulls, and the Cotati, with Earth caught in the middle. The story begins eons ago on the planet Hala, when the primordial Skrulls, then a peaceful exploratory race, discovered the planet was home to two sentient species: the warrior-like Kree and the telepathic, plant-based Cotati. To determine which race would represent Hala in their galactic union, the Skrulls proposed a test: they took groups from both species to Earth's uninhabited Moon (specifically the Blue Area of the Moon) and challenged them to create something of lasting worth. The Kree used their advanced engineering skills to build a magnificent, sprawling city. The Cotati, in contrast, cultivated a vibrant, lush garden. When the Skrulls declared the Cotati the victors, the enraged Kree slaughtered them and stole the Skrulls' advanced starship technology. This act of genocide was the inciting incident for the Kree-Skrull War, which would rage for countless generations, transforming both races into militaristic empires. Unbeknownst to the Kree, a small group of Cotati survived, as did their garden on the Moon. This group was later discovered by the Avengers during the Celestial Madonna Saga, where it was prophesied that a Cotati would mate with the “perfect human” to produce the Celestial Messiah, a being named Quoi. This child was born to Mantis of the Avengers and a Cotati who had reanimated the body of the deceased Avenger, the Swordsman. Centuries of war eventually decimated both the Kree and Skrull empires. The Skrull homeworld was devoured by Galactus, and the Kree were ruled by the tyrannical Supreme Intelligence. The key to ending the conflict was Dorrek VIII, also known as Teddy Altman-Kaplan or Hulkling. As the son of the Kree hero Captain Mar-Vell and the Skrull Princess Anelle, he was the only living being with a legitimate claim to both thrones. In the lead-up to Empyre, Kree and Skrull delegations convinced him to embrace his heritage, unite their peoples, and wield the mythical blade Excelsior, the Star-Sword, as the first ruler of the new Kree-Skrull Alliance. His first act as Emperor was to set a course for Earth, seemingly to finish the war his ancestors started. However, his true target was the Cotati, who, under the leadership of his half-brother Quoi, had used the Avengers' unknowing help to establish a base on the Moon, preparing to unleash a “Death Bloom” to exterminate all animal life and reclaim the galaxy for the plant kingdom.
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
The Empyre storyline has not occurred in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and its direct adaptation would require the introduction of numerous core concepts and characters not yet present in the franchise. The MCU has established its own versions of the Kree and the Skrulls, but their history and nature differ significantly from the comics.
- The Kree: Portrayed as a militaristic, xenophobic empire led by a Supreme Intelligence (seen in Captain Marvel). They were responsible for the subjugation of many worlds and the experimentation that created the Inhumans (as seen in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.).
- The Skrulls: Introduced in Captain Marvel as refugees, victims of Kree genocide, rather than a galactic empire on equal footing. While some Skrulls led by Gravik have become militant extremists (as seen in Secret Invasion), the primary faction led by Talos has been depicted as allies to Nick Fury and Carol Danvers.
For an Empyre-like event to happen in the MCU, the following elements would need to be introduced:
- Hulkling (Teddy Altman): The central figure of the entire saga. His parentage—a Kree father and a Skrull mother—is the bedrock of the Kree-Skrull Alliance. He has not been introduced or hinted at.
- Wiccan (Billy Kaplan): Hulkling's husband and a powerful magic-user. While his “brother” Tommy appeared in WandaVision, Billy's future in the MCU remains uncertain.
- The Cotati: The plant-like race has never been mentioned in the MCU. Their entire backstory, connection to the Kree, and the Celestial Madonna prophecy would need to be established from scratch.
- A Unified Kree-Skrull Empire: The current MCU dynamic is one of Kree aggressors and Skrull victims/refugees. A fundamental shift would be required to position them as two comparable empires capable of unification under a common leader.
While a future MCU saga could draw thematic inspiration from Empyre—such as a story involving a new generation of heroes dealing with the fallout of the Kree-Skrull conflict—a direct adaptation of the comic's plot is highly unlikely given the current state of the cinematic universe's lore.
Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath
Main Narrative & Key Turning Points
The core Empyre event unfolds as a grand cosmic opera, filled with misdirection, epic battles, and crucial character moments.
- Act 1: The False Invasion and The True Threat: The event begins with the massive Kree-Skrull Alliance fleet arriving in Earth's solar system. The Avengers and the Fantastic Four move to intercept, expecting a full-scale invasion. Iron Man, in his most advanced armor, confronts the fleet head-on, only to be effortlessly swatted aside. The Alliance's ground forces, led by the Super-Skrull, land on the Moon. It's here the first major twist is revealed: the Alliance is not there to attack Earth, but to destroy the Cotati, who have taken root in the garden on the Blue Area of the Moon. The Avengers, believing the Cotati to be a peaceful, endangered species, defend them from the Alliance. This “victory” for the heroes is exactly what the Cotati leader, Quoi, had planned. With the Kree-Skrull fleet momentarily repelled, the Cotati reveal their true nature and launch their own invasion of Earth, starting with an attack on Wakanda.
- Act 2: The Cotati Offensive: The Cotati's goal is revealed to be utterly genocidal. They intend to use their Death Blossoms to fertilize the Earth and other worlds, killing all animal-based life and allowing plant life to dominate the universe. Their leader, Quoi, is guided by a reanimated Swordsman, whose body is possessed by a prime Cotati elder. The offensive is global and multifaceted. In Wakanda, they seek to control the Vibranium-infused soil. In the Savage Land, they attempt to seize control of the unique flora. On the seas, they use plant-life to attack ships. The heroes of Earth are caught completely off-guard, having defended the very enemy now trying to exterminate them.
- Act 3: The Alliance of Earth: Realizing their catastrophic mistake, the Avengers and Fantastic Four forge a desperate alliance with Emperor Hulkling's forces. This act marks a historic turning point, as the heroes of Earth fight alongside the unified Kree and Skrull armies. Key moments define this final act:
- Captain Marvel becomes the Supreme Accuser: Wielding the Universal Weapon, Carol Danvers embraces her Kree heritage to lead a portion of the Alliance's forces.
- The Invisible Woman's Gambit: Sue Storm uses her powers to turn a Kree-Skrull “Pyre”—a weapon designed to destroy planets—into a contained blast that decimates the Cotati forces on the Moon without harming the planet itself.
- Black Panther's Defense of Wakanda: T'Challa leads the Wakandan forces, using their technological and strategic superiority to hold back the Cotati invasion, a critical front in the war.
- Wiccan's Arrival: Billy Kaplan arrives at the Alliance flagship, using his reality-warping powers to break a Cotati curse that was turning the Kree and Skrulls against each other. His reunion with Hulkling provides the emotional core for the finale.
- Climax and Resolution: The final battle takes place on two fronts: Wakanda and the former mutant nation of Genosha. The Thing lands a decisive punch on the possessed Swordsman, allowing Mantis to telepathically reach him. Meanwhile, Hulkling confronts a cosmically-empowered Quoi. Just as Quoi is about to win, the Kree R'Klll and Skrull K'Lrt reveal they have secretly been testing him, and he has failed. He is stripped of his power. In the final moment, the malevolent Cotati intelligence that possessed the Swordsman attempts to detonate the Death Bloom. Hulkling is forced to execute him with the Star-Sword. In the aftermath, the Cotati threat is neutralized, with the surviving members placed under the guardianship of Mantis and the now-liberated Swordsman.
Key Factions and Their Roles
- The Kree-Skrull Alliance: The newly-formed superpower, nominally led by Emperor Hulkling. Their primary motivation is the complete eradication of the Cotati, whom they see as an ancient and existential threat. Key figures include Kl'rt the Super-Skrull, Tanalth the Pursuer, and Captain Glory. A splinter faction within the Alliance, led by the Kree revolutionary R'Klll, secretly works to undermine Hulkling, believing him to be too compassionate to lead them.
- The Cotati: The event's true antagonists. Led by Quoi, the Celestial Messiah, they present themselves as victims seeking refuge. In reality, they are extremist eco-terrorists driven by a generations-old grudge against animal life. Their primary weapon is the Death Bloom, a plant that can scour a planet of all non-botanical organisms.
- The Avengers: Led by Captain America and Iron Man, they act as Earth's first line of defense. Their initial misjudgment of the situation—defending the Cotati—is a critical plot point that allows the invasion to begin. Key members like Thor, She-Hulk, and Ghost Rider play major roles in various theaters of war.
- The Fantastic Four: Their deep space experience makes them vital. Reed Richards' scientific acumen and Sue Storm's incredible power prove decisive. The children, Franklin and Valeria, also play a key role in uncovering the Cotati's true intentions early on.
- The X-Men: While not part of the main conflict, a crucial tie-in series sees a Cotati force invade the dead island of Genosha. They attempt to use the millions of mutant corpses as a zombie army, forcing a contingent of X-Men—including Angel, Magik, and Magneto—to intervene in a horrific battle.
The Aftermath and Lasting Consequences
Empyre left a significant mark on the Marvel Universe's cosmic status quo.
- A New Galactic Power: The Kree-Skrull Alliance is formally recognized as a major galactic empire, with its capital on the Skrull throne world of Tarnax II.
- Emperor Hulkling and Prince-Consort Wiccan: The event concludes with the official marriage of Teddy Altman and Billy Kaplan. This celebrated moment solidifies their status as a cosmic power couple and a landmark for LGBTQ+ representation in comics.
- The Fate of Quoi: Defeated and humbled, Quoi is taken into custody by the Avengers, and later released to the care of Mantis to be re-educated.
- A New Role for Captain Marvel: Carol Danvers' time as the Supreme Accuser, though brief, reinforced her complex connection to the Kree and positioned her as a major player in galactic diplomacy.
- Seeds for Future Conflict: The internal dissent within the Kree-Skrull Alliance, particularly from those who view Hulkling's leadership as weak, was left as a dangling plot thread for future stories, notably explored in the Guardians of the Galaxy series that followed.
Part 4: Central Characters & Defining Arcs
Emperor Hulkling (Dorrek VIII)
Teddy Altman's journey is the central pillar of Empyre. The story forces him to evolve from a hero and a Young Avenger into a galactic monarch responsible for trillions of lives. He is initially a reluctant leader, pushed into the role by the weight of his destiny. Throughout the event, he struggles to reconcile his compassionate, Earth-taught morality with the ruthless pragmatism demanded by his Kree and Skrull subjects. His defining moments include his decision to lead the war against the Cotati, his refusal to destroy Earth to win, and his ultimate, heartbreaking choice to execute the possessed Swordsman to save the universe. His arc solidifies him not just as a king by birthright, but as a leader who earned his crown through difficult choices.
Wiccan (Billy Kaplan)
While Hulkling is the story's strategic center, Wiccan is its emotional and magical heart. Initially absent while on a personal quest with his brother Speed, he arrives at a critical moment when the Alliance is on the brink of collapse due to Cotati psychic influence. Billy's immense power as the Demiurge allows him to purge their influence with ease, demonstrating his god-tier abilities. More importantly, his unwavering love and support for Teddy ground the entire cosmic epic. Their marriage in the finale is not just a personal victory but a political statement, symbolizing a union of magic and might, and a hopeful future for the new empire.
Quoi and The Swordsman
As the primary antagonists, Quoi and the possessed Swordsman represent a corruption of noble ideals. Quoi, prophesied to be a messiah who would bring peace, becomes twisted by his people's historical trauma and his own arrogance. He transforms a desire for justice into a campaign of genocide, believing he is the rightful savior of the universe. The Swordsman's role is even more tragic. A former hero, his body is merely a vessel for an ancient, vengeful Cotati. This robs him of his agency and turns a symbol of the Avengers' past into a weapon against them. His eventual freedom from the Cotati's control provides a somber, bittersweet resolution to his arc.
The Invisible Woman (Sue Storm) & Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers)
Both Sue Storm and Carol Danvers have critical sub-arcs that showcase their unique strengths and histories. Sue's compassion initially leads her to make a grave error in shielding the Cotati, but she quickly pivots, using her formidable power and intellect to devise a plan that saves Earth and decimates the enemy fleet. It's a powerful display of why she is often considered the most powerful member of the Fantastic Four. Carol's arc forces her to confront her Kree heritage more directly than ever before. By accepting the role of Supreme Accuser, she wields the power of her former oppressors to defend her adopted home, a complex and powerful statement about her identity.
Part 5: Significant Tie-Ins & Subplots
Empyre: X-Men
This four-issue limited series, written by Jonathan Hickman and Tini Howard, focused on a unique and horrifying front in the Cotati war: Genosha. A Cotati force lands on the island, the site of a mutant genocide, and uses its power to reanimate the 16 million dead mutants as a plant-zombie army. A small, eclectic group of X-Men are forced to fight not just an invading army, but grotesque, plant-infested versions of their fallen friends and allies. The series is noted for its dark humor and body horror, and for a particularly memorable subplot involving the resurrection of one of the original “exploding” zombies from the Genoshan attack.
Empyre: Avengers
The tie-in issues of the main Avengers title explored several key fronts of the war. One major storyline focused on the battle for the Savage Land, where the Cotati attempted to corrupt the unique, prehistoric ecosystem. This brought Ka-Zar, Shanna the She-Devil, and the Black Knight into the conflict. Another plotline followed Doctor Nemesis as he worked to find a biological weakness in the Cotati. The series highlighted the global scale of the invasion beyond the primary battlefields shown in the main book.
Empyre: Captain America
This three-issue series by writer Phillip Kennedy Johnson provided a vital street-level perspective on the cosmic invasion. While gods and emperors clashed in space, Captain America worked on the ground, organizing civilian evacuations and fighting Cotati soldiers in the trenches of Washington D.C. The story emphasized Cap's role as a symbol of hope and his connection to the common soldier, contrasting sharply with the high-level strategic maneuvers of Iron Man and Black Panther. It featured the U.S. Agent and other members of the military fighting alongside Cap.
Part 6: Legacy and Connections to Marvel History
The Celestial Madonna Saga (Avengers #129-135, Giant-Size Avengers #2-4)
Empyre is, in essence, a direct sequel to this seminal 1970s epic by Steve Englehart. It was in the Celestial Madonna Saga that the Avengers first learned the true origin of the Kree-Skrull War, discovered the pacifist Cotati on the Moon, and witnessed the union of Mantis with a Cotati to conceive Quoi, the “Celestial Messiah.” Empyre takes this foundational lore and inverts it, turning the once-peaceful Cotati into aggressors and the prophesied savior into a villain, adding a layer of tragic irony for longtime readers.
The Kree-Skrull War (Avengers #89-97)
Roy Thomas's original Kree-Skrull War defined the template for Marvel's cosmic events. It established the Kree and Skrulls as implacable, ideologically opposed empires and placed Earth squarely in the middle of their ancient conflict. Empyre serves as the definitive endnote to this storyline. By uniting the two empires under a single ruler who shares the blood of both, the event resolves the central conflict that has fueled hundreds of stories for nearly fifty years.
Young Avengers (2005)
The entire premise of Empyre hinges on the backstory created for Hulkling by Allan Heinberg and Jim Cheung in their celebrated Young Avengers series. It was here that Teddy Altman was revealed not just as a Skrull, but as the hidden son of Captain Mar-Vell and a Skrull princess, making him royalty in both empires. Without this crucial piece of character-building from fifteen years prior, the political solution at the heart of Empyre would not be possible. The event serves as the ultimate payoff to Hulkling's long and complex journey of self-discovery.