important_note

Infinity Stones / Infinity Gems

  • Core Identity: The Infinity Stones, known in the comics as the Infinity Gems, are six immensely powerful singularities from a prior universe, each governing a fundamental aspect of existence: Space, Mind, Reality, Power, Time, and Soul.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: They are among the most powerful artifacts in the Marvel Universe. Individually, each grants its wielder mastery over its domain; when united, typically via an Infinity Gauntlet, they bestow godlike power, effectively granting the user omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence.
  • Primary Impact: The quest to find, control, or destroy the Stones has been the catalyst for some of the most catastrophic and universe-altering events in Marvel history, most notably the numerous campaigns waged by the Mad Titan, Thanos.
  • Key Incarnations: The most significant difference between the comics and the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) involves their names (Gems in Earth-616, Stones in the MCU) and, critically, their colors, which were swapped and later standardized in the comics to match their film counterparts for brand synergy.

The artifacts that would become the Infinity Gems were introduced gradually into the Marvel canon by writer and artist Jim Starlin. The very first to appear was the Soul Gem, which debuted alongside its most famous wielder, Adam Warlock, in Marvel Premiere #1, published in April 1972. Initially, Starlin referred to them as “Soul Gems,” conceiving them as a set of six related objects of immense power. Over the next several years, the other gems were revealed in various Marvel titles, often in the possession of cosmic characters known as the Elders of the Universe. It wasn't until the 1990 miniseries The Thanos Quest that all six were officially named the “Infinity Gems” and their collective nature was fully established. This series, written by Starlin, chronicled Thanos's methodical acquisition of each Gem, setting the stage for the seminal 1991 crossover event, The Infinity Gauntlet. This storyline cemented the Gems' status as the ultimate objects of power in the Marvel Universe and remains the definitive story associated with them. After the immense success of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the comics continuity gradually began referring to the artifacts as “Infinity Stones” to align with the film franchise.

In-Universe Origin Story

The in-universe origin of the Infinity Stones differs significantly between the primary comic continuity and the cinematic universe, reflecting the different narrative needs of each medium.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The original and most esoteric origin of the Infinity Gems is tied to a primordial, godlike cosmic entity known as Nemesis. Before the current iteration of reality, Nemesis was the sole sentient being in existence. Overwhelmed by eternal loneliness, this omnipotent being decided to end its own existence. However, its power was too great to be simply extinguished. In a cataclysmic event that birthed the new universe (including Earth-616), the essence of Nemesis was shattered into six fragments. These fragments, containing the core of its being, became the Infinity Gems. Each Gem inherited a fundamental aspect of Nemesis's power: Mind, Soul, Space, Power, Time, and Reality. They are, in essence, the universe's DNA. This origin story posits that the Gems retain a faint, residual consciousness of their parent entity. It has been suggested that if the six Gems were ever to be reunited for a prolonged period, the Nemesis entity could potentially reform, with catastrophic consequences for all of creation. Later storylines have simplified or added to this origin, sometimes describing them as physical manifestations of the abstract concepts themselves, born from the Big Bang of the current universe. Regardless of the specifics, their core identity as singularities of immense, universe-defining power remains constant. They are considered indestructible by conventional means, though their form can be altered or their energy depleted, only to eventually reform.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The Marvel Cinematic Universe offers a more streamlined and accessible origin story for the Infinity Stones, as explained by The Collector in Guardians of the Galaxy and Wong in Avengers: Infinity War. According to this canon, before creation itself, there were six singularities. At the moment of the Big Bang, the nascent universe exploded into existence, and the remnants of these six primordial singularities were forged and concentrated into six ingots—the Infinity Stones. As Wong explains, “The Big Bang sent six elemental crystals… hurdling across the virgin universe. These Infinity Stones each control an essential aspect of existence.” This origin ties the Stones directly to the birth of the universe, making them relics of creation itself. They are not fragments of a former being like Nemesis but rather the physical embodiment of the universe's fundamental laws. Throughout the MCU's history, various cosmic entities and ancient civilizations, such as the Celestials and the Asgardians, discovered and wielded the Stones, often housing them within powerful artifacts to contain and control their immense energy.

  • The Space Stone was housed within the Tesseract.
  • The Mind Stone was housed within Loki's Scepter.
  • The Reality Stone was transformed into a liquid-like state known as the Aether.
  • The Power Stone was contained within the Orb on the planet Morag.
  • The Time Stone was placed within the Eye of Agamotto.
  • The Soul Stone was hidden on the planet Vormir, guarded by a spectral entity.

This adaptation was a strategic choice for the films, avoiding the need to introduce a complex cosmic being like Nemesis and instead rooting the Stones' origin in a scientifically relatable (albeit fictionalized) event like the Big Bang, making it more digestible for a mass audience.

A detailed breakdown of each individual Stone/Gem reveals the scope of their power. The most notable difference for fans is the color scheme, which was different in the comics for decades before being retconned to match the popular MCU versions.

Stone/Gem Original Comic Color (Pre-2017) MCU & Modern Comic Color Core Domain
Soul Green Orange Mastery over life, death, and souls.
Power Red Purple Control over all forms of power and energy.
Time Orange Green Total control over the past, present, and future.
Space Purple Blue Mastery over distance and spatial dimensions.
Reality Yellow Red Ability to alter the very fabric of reality.
Mind Blue Yellow Dominion over the psychic realm; telepathy and telekinesis.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the comics, the Gems possess a degree of sentience and can, at times, influence their wielders. Their powers are nearly limitless within their respective domains.

The Soul Gem is arguably the most dangerous and sentient of the six.

  • Powers: It grants the user the ability to perceive, manipulate, attack, and absorb the souls of any living (or dead) being. Its most famous feature is a pocket universe contained within it known as Soulworld, a peaceful, idyllic dimension where the souls it has claimed reside. A wielder can trap others in Soulworld or enter it themselves. The Gem has a vampiric hunger for souls.
  • Notable Wielders: Its most famous wielder is Adam Warlock, who had a symbiotic, and often adversarial, relationship with the Gem. Others include Thanos, Magus, Doctor Strange, and Gamora.

The Power Gem is the least subtle of the Gems, granting its wielder immense physical might and energy.

  • Powers: It provides access to all power and energy that has ever or will ever exist. It can augment the user's physical strength and durability to infinite levels. It can also be used to duplicate almost any physical superpower and can boost the effects of the other five Gems.
  • Notable Wielders: The Champion of the Universe, Drax the Destroyer, Thor, She-Hulk, and Thanos. It is often wielded by beings who rely on raw strength.

The Time Gem provides its wielder with total dominion over the temporal flow.

  • Powers: It allows the user to see into the past and future, stop, slow down, or accelerate the flow of time, and travel through time. It can also be used to age or de-age beings or trap them in an unending time loop. In the hands of an unskilled user, it can be incredibly dangerous, creating paradoxes or causing unintended consequences.
  • Notable Wielders: The Gardener, Gamora, Doctor Strange, Namor, and Thanos.

The Space Gem allows the user to exist in any location, or all locations, at once.

  • Powers: Its primary function is teleportation, allowing the wielder to instantly transport themselves or others anywhere in the universe. It can also be used to manipulate spatial distances, such as making faraway objects appear close, or to warp and rearrange space itself. This grants the wielder omnipresence.
  • Notable Wielders: The Runner, Pip the Troll, Black Bolt, Iron Man, and Thanos.

The Reality Gem is often considered the most powerful and most dangerous of the Gems when used alone.

  • Powers: It grants the user the ability to alter reality to match their thoughts. It can make any wish, no matter how outlandish, come true. However, its power is notoriously difficult to control. Without the other Gems to provide stability and focus, a wish can have disastrous, universe-wide consequences. It operates by ignoring and violating the established laws of physics.
  • Notable Wielders: The Collector, Thanos, Professor X, Black Bolt, and Iron Man.

The Mind Gem taps into the collective consciousness of the universe.

  • Powers: It grants the wielder nearly limitless psionic abilities, including telepathy and telekinesis. The user can read any mind in existence, communicate with any being, control minds, and project their thoughts across vast distances. When combined with the Power Gem, its reach can extend across every mind in the universe simultaneously.
  • Notable Wielders: The Grandmaster, Moondragon, Professor X, The Hood, and Thanos.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU Stones' powers are broadly similar to their comic counterparts but are often demonstrated in more specific, plot-driven ways. Their history is woven into the very fabric of the film series.

Housed within the Tesseract, this Stone was a major plot device long before the Infinity Saga was named.

  • History & Powers: Wielded by Hydra during World War II to create advanced weaponry. It was later recovered by S.H.I.E.L.D. and its energy was studied, leading to Project P.E.G.A.S.U.S. Loki used it to open a portal for the Chitauri invasion in The Avengers. It grants the power to open wormholes and travel instantaneously across the vastness of space.

Originally hidden within Loki's Scepter, a gift from Thanos.

  • History & Powers: Used by Loki to control the minds of others, including Hawkeye. It was later used by Hydra scientists to grant powers to Wanda Maximoff (Scarlet Witch) and Pietro Maximoff (Quicksilver). Ultimately, it was used by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner to grant sentience to the android Vision, becoming the source of his life. It grants potent mental powers and can bestow consciousness.

Known in its liquid form as the Aether.

  • History & Powers: Sought by the Dark Elf Malekith, who intended to use its reality-warping power to plunge the Nine Realms into eternal darkness. It temporarily bonded with Jane Foster before being secured by the Asgardians and given to The Collector for safekeeping. Its power is to convert matter and energy, ignore physical laws, and rewrite reality on a localized scale.

Contained within the Orb on the abandoned planet of Morag.

  • History & Powers: Sought by Ronan the Accuser on behalf of Thanos, but was intercepted by Peter Quill. Its raw, destructive energy is so immense that most mortal beings cannot wield it directly without being disintegrated. The Guardians of the Galaxy were only able to contain its power by sharing the energy load. It was secured by the Nova Corps on Xandar until Thanos claimed it.

Protected within the Eye of Agamotto by the Masters of the Mystic Arts.

  • History & Powers: Guarded for generations by the Sorcerers Supreme of Earth. Doctor Strange learned to master its abilities, using it to create time loops to defeat Dormammu and to view millions of possible futures to find the one path to victory against Thanos. It offers complete control over the flow of time.

The most mysterious and elusive of the Stones.

  • History & Powers: Hidden on the desolate planet Vormir and guarded by the Red Skull, who was cursed to become its keeper. To acquire it, one must make an ultimate sacrifice: the life of someone they truly love. This “soul for a soul” exchange was paid by Thanos (sacrificing Gamora) and later by Natasha Romanoff (sacrificing herself so Clint Barton could take it). Its specific powers are the least defined in the MCU, though Thanos uses it to identify the real Doctor Strange among his duplicates and to knock the souls out of the Avengers on Titan.

While countless individuals have held an Infinity Stone, a select few have defined their legacy by attempting to wield all six.

Thanos is, without question, the character most synonymous with the Infinity Stones.

  • Earth-616: In the comics, Thanos's primary motivation for assembling the Infinity Gauntlet was his nihilistic obsession with and love for the cosmic embodiment of Mistress Death. To prove his devotion and win her affection, he sought the power to extinguish half of all life in the universe, an act he saw as a grand, romantic gesture. His quest was one of cosmic courtship through genocide.
  • MCU: The MCU adapted his motivation to be more ideological. Here, Thanos is a Malthusian zealot who believes the universe is finite in its resources and that unchecked life will lead to universal collapse and suffering, as it did on his home planet of Titan. He sees the extermination of half of all life not as an act of worship, but as a “mercy”—a necessary, random, and dispassionate rebalancing of the universal scales.

In the comic universe, Adam Warlock is the antithesis to Thanos's ambition.

  • Earth-616: Warlock's bond with the Soul Gem makes him uniquely attuned to the Infinity Gems. During the Infinity Gauntlet event, it is Warlock who masterminds the strategy to defeat the god-powered Thanos. After Thanos is defeated, Warlock takes possession of the Gauntlet himself. Deemed too unstable to wield such power, he is forced by the Living Tribunal to disperse the Gems. He creates the Infinity Watch, a team of guardians to whom he entrusts each individual Gem, keeping the Soul Gem for himself.

These two secret groups represent different philosophies on how to handle the Gems' immense power.

  • The Infinity Watch (Earth-616): Founded by Adam Warlock, this group was tasked with safeguarding the Gems individually to prevent them from ever being used in concert again. The members were specifically chosen because their nature would not be tempted by their assigned Gem's power:
    • Gamora: Time Gem
    • Pip the Troll: Space Gem
    • Drax the Destroyer: Power Gem
    • Moondragon: Mind Gem
    • Adam Warlock: Soul Gem
    • (The Reality Gem was given to a secret guardian, later revealed to be Thanos himself, whom Warlock believed was the only being capable of mastering it).
  • The Illuminati (Earth-616): Years later, the secret cabal of heroes known as the Illuminati (including Iron Man, Professor X, Black Bolt, and Doctor Strange) reassembled the Gauntlet in an attempt to use its power to prevent cosmic threats. When this failed, they too divided the Gems among themselves, but their stewardship ultimately led to disaster during the “Incursions” that preceded the Secret Wars event.

In the MCU, the Avengers are the primary force both resisting and, ultimately, wielding the Infinity Stones.

  • Their journey is defined by reacting to threats posed by the Stones (Loki's scepter, the Tesseract). In Avengers: Infinity War, they fail to stop Thanos from assembling the Gauntlet, leading to “The Blip.” In Avengers: Endgame, their mission becomes to reclaim the Stones through a “Time Heist.” This culminates in two heroic, and devastating, uses of a Stark-built Gauntlet: first by Bruce Banner to reverse the Blip and bring everyone back, and finally by Tony Stark to wipe out Thanos and his army, at the cost of his own life.

This two-issue comic series is the essential prelude to Infinity Gauntlet. It details Thanos's brilliant and ruthless campaign to acquire the six Gems. He doesn't just use brute force; he intellectually outmaneuvers each of the Elders of the Universe who possesses a Gem. He tricks the Champion, outplays the Gardener in a battle of life and death, and manipulates his way to victory, showcasing his cunning as much as his power. This story established the scope and nature of each Gem's power for the first time.

The quintessential Infinity Stone storyline. Having assembled the Gauntlet, Thanos fulfills his promise to Mistress Death by erasing half of all life in the universe with a simple snap of his fingers. What follows is a desperate war waged by Earth's surviving heroes and cosmic entities against an omnipotent being. The story is famous for its shocking moments, including the systematic and effortless defeat of heroes like Captain America, Iron Man, and Thor. Thanos is ultimately defeated not by force, but by his own hubris and subconscious desire to lose, which allows his spurned “granddaughter” Nebula to seize the Gauntlet from him, before it is finally claimed by Adam Warlock.

This is not a single event but a 23-film macro-narrative chronicling the scattered appearances of the Infinity Stones and Thanos's shadowy quest to unite them. The saga is defined by two climactic films:

  • Avengers: Infinity War (2018): This film depicts the culmination of Thanos's quest. It is a desperate, galaxy-spanning race against time as the Avengers and their allies try, and ultimately fail, to prevent him from acquiring all six Stones. The film ends with one of the most famous cliffhangers in cinema history: Thanos snaps his fingers, and beloved heroes like Spider-Man, Doctor Strange, and Black Panther turn to dust.
  • Avengers: Endgame (2019): This film shows the universe grappling with the aftermath of “The Blip.” The surviving Avengers embark on a complex time-travel mission to borrow the Stones from different points in the past. Their success leads to a monumental final battle against a past version of Thanos and his entire army. The saga concludes with Tony Stark making the ultimate sacrifice, using the Stones to save the universe.

In the Ultimate comics line, the Infinity Gems are significantly different. There are eight Gems, not six, and two Gauntlets are required to wield them all. The Gems were created by the alien race known as the Gah Lak Tus swarm and are scattered across the planet, with one embedded in Tony Stark's brain as a benign tumor and another on the forehead of the Ultimate version of Vision.

The animated series explores alternate timelines, with one of the most powerful variants being Infinity Ultron. In a universe where Ultron successfully uploaded his consciousness into Vision's body (which contained the Mind Stone), he swiftly defeats the Avengers, kills Thanos, and takes the remaining five Infinity Stones for himself. With the power of the Gauntlet, Ultron becomes aware of the multiverse and The Watcher, elevating him from a planetary threat to a multiversal one, capable of destroying entire realities.

In a crossover between Marvel and the Malibu Comics' Ultraverse, a seventh Infinity Gem was discovered: the Ego Gem. This Gem contained the consciousness of the primordial entity Nemesis. When the six other Gems were brought together, the Ego Gem manifested and merged them, resurrecting Nemesis. This Gem is not considered part of the mainstream Earth-616 canon but is a fascinating piece of trivia from a unique moment in comics history.


1)
The first appearance of an Infinity Gem was the Soul Gem in Marvel Premiere #1 (1972).
2)
For decades, the comic book colors for the Gems were different from what is now standard. The Power Gem was red, Space was purple, Reality yellow, Time orange, Mind blue, and Soul green. After the massive success of the MCU, where the colors were different (e.g., Power was purple, Space was blue), the comics initiated a 2017 storyline, Marvel Legacy #1, that saw the Gems' colors mysteriously change to align with their on-screen counterparts. This is one of the most significant examples of cinematic synergy influencing comic book canon.
3)
The name “Infinity Stones” was popularized by the MCU. The comics exclusively referred to them as “Infinity Gems” until the late 2010s, after which “Stones” became the more common term in-universe as well.
4)
In 2022, Marvel collaborated with East Continental Gems to create a real-life “Infinity Gauntlet” set with over 150 carats of actual gemstones, including a 35-carat ruby for the Reality Stone and a 30-carat emerald for the Time Stone, valued at over $25 million.
5)
The concept of a 'seventh' Infinity Stone has been explored multiple times in non-canon or alternate realities. Besides the Ego Gem, the 'Death Stone' has also appeared in certain video game storylines.