Makluans

  • Core Identity: The Makluans are a highly advanced, ancient race of reptilian, shapeshifting extraterrestrials from the planet Maklu-IV, most famously known as the species of the colossal dragon Fin Fang Foom and the original creators of the powerful artifacts known as the Ten Rings of Power.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: Originally presented as would-be conquerors, the Makluans function as a background elder race whose primary influence is felt through their potent technology and their most infamous member, Fin Fang Foom. Their crashed starship and its contents, the Ten Rings, were instrumental in the creation of one of Earth's greatest villains, the Mandarin.
  • Primary Impact: The Makluans' most significant legacy is their technology. The Ten Rings of Power have been a persistent threat to global stability, a consistent challenge for Iron Man, and a source of immense power for those who wield them. Furthermore, Fin Fang Foom remains one of the most powerful and recognizable “monsters” in the Marvel Universe, a living embodiment of the species' might.
  • Key Incarnations: In the Prime Comic Universe (Earth-616), the Makluans are literal space dragons with a detailed backstory of galactic exploration and conquest. In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), the species is unnamed and unseen; their existence is only inferred through the mysterious, bracelet-like Ten Rings, whose origin remains a major unresolved plot point.

The history of the Makluans is a fascinating example of retroactive continuity, or “retcon,” in comic book storytelling. The species was not conceived initially but was created decades later to provide a unified origin for two separate elements from Marvel's Silver Age: the monster Fin Fang Foom and the technology of the Mandarin. The most famous Makluan, Fin Fang Foom, first appeared in Strange Tales #89 (October 1961), created by the legendary duo of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. During this pre-superhero era of Marvel (then Atlas Comics), Lee and Kirby produced numerous monster comics, and Fin Fang Foom was a quintessential “monster-of-the-month,” a giant dragon awakened in modern China. He was a standalone creature with no hint of an extraterrestrial origin. The Mandarin, and his ten rings of alien origin, debuted in Tales of Suspense #50 (February 1964), created by Stan Lee and Don Heck. His rings were explicitly stated to be from a crashed alien starship, but the identity of these aliens was left a mystery for nearly thirty years. The two concepts were finally merged in the “Dragon Seed Saga” storyline in Iron Man vol. 1 #267-275 (1991), primarily crafted by writer John Byrne and artist Paul Ryan. It was in this arc that the alien race was named the Makluans, and it was revealed that Fin Fang Foom was a member of this species and that the Mandarin's rings were the power source and control system of their crashed ship. This retcon elegantly tied together two of Iron Man's oldest and most disparate narrative threads into a single, cohesive backstory.

In-Universe Origin Story

The in-universe history of the Makluans differs dramatically between the comics and the cinematic universe, representing one of the most significant adaptations in the MCU.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

The Makluans hail from the planet Maklu-IV, the fourth planet orbiting the star Maklu in the Greater Magellanic Cloud. Their society evolved over millennia into a scientifically and philosophically advanced civilization. They were a peaceful people, content with their knowledge and pursuits. However, their reptilian nature harbored a dormant aggression, and eventually, a faction of the populace grew to believe that their destiny was to carry their enlightened culture to the “lesser” races of the universe, by force if necessary. This led to the launch of an exploratory—and potentially conquering—expedition. A small crew of Makluans boarded their starship, the Axon-Karr, and set a course for a promising, life-bearing planet they had identified: Earth. The crew consisted of a commander and several other officers, with their navigator being a particularly large and powerful specimen known by the title Fin Fang Foom. Centuries ago, the Axon-Karr crash-landed in the Valley of the Sleeping Dragon in ancient China. Stranded, the surviving crew formulated a long-term plan for conquest. Their greatest asset was their ability to shapeshift. All but one of the crew members assumed human form, using their advanced intellect and long lifespans to subtly integrate themselves into human society, rising to positions of influence over the centuries and waiting for the opportune moment to seize control. Fin Fang Foom, due to his immense size and power, was designated as the ultimate failsafe. He was placed in a state of suspended animation within a sealed tomb, guarded by a local cult that was manipulated by the Makluans. A special herb was the only thing capable of keeping the dragon dormant. Should the shapeshifted Makluans' infiltration plan fail, Fin Fang Foom was to be awakened to conquer the planet through sheer force. Their meticulously crafted plan was upended by a single human. A disgraced nobleman and brilliant scientist, the man who would become the Mandarin, discovered the wreckage of the Axon-Karr. Inside, he found the ship's primary controls and power source: ten cylindrical devices that he fashioned into rings. He spent years mastering their incredible power, becoming a formidable warlord and a threat to the entire world. The Makluans, in their human guises, were horrified to find their own technology used against them by a “primitive” being, derailing their centuries-long scheme. The rise of the Mandarin and, later, his nemesis Iron Man, would eventually force the Makluans out of the shadows and into direct conflict.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

In the MCU, the origin story is far more enigmatic and centered entirely on the artifacts, not the species. The race that created the Ten Rings is never seen, named, or described, making their story a tale of influence by proxy. The history begins thousands of years ago when Wenwu, a warrior in ancient China, discovers a set of ten mysterious, bracelet-like rings in either a crater or a tomb. The film Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings leaves the exact circumstances of their discovery ambiguous. Unlike the comics' technological cylinders, these are glowing, intricately designed armbands with no obvious controls. Upon wearing them, Wenwu is granted immense power: superhuman strength, concussive energy blasts, and eternal life. Using this power, he amasses an army and creates a clandestine organization also known as the Ten Rings. For a thousand years, he topples governments, acquires wealth, and shapes history from the shadows. The origin of the rings he wields remains a complete mystery to him and everyone else. The MCU deliberately separates the rings from any known alien race. In a post-credits scene of Shang-Chi, Wong, Captain Marvel, and Bruce Banner analyze the rings. They confirm the artifacts are far older than Wenwu's discovery of them and are of non-terrestrial origin. Critically, they state the rings are not made of vibranium, nor do they match any Chitauri, Kree, or other known alien technology in their databases. They also discover that the rings are emitting a beacon, sending a signal to an unknown recipient in an unknown location. This establishes the MCU's version of the “Makluans” as a powerful, unknown force whose technology has been on Earth for millennia and is now calling home. The adaptation shifts the narrative from a story of failed conquest (comics) to a story of profound cosmic mystery (MCU), leaving the nature, appearance, and intent of the rings' creators as a tantalizing question for the future of the saga.

The attributes of the Makluan race are well-documented in the comics but remain almost entirely speculative in the MCU.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

  • Biology:
  • Natural Form: In their true forms, Makluans are immense, reptilian beings that strongly resemble classical Earth dragons. They possess long, serpentine bodies, massive wings capable of flight, razor-sharp claws, and durable, scaled hides. Fin Fang Foom, standing over 32 feet tall, is a prime example of their species' potential size and power.
  • Shapeshifting: Their most versatile biological trait is cellular malleability, allowing them to alter their physical form to perfectly mimic other species, most notably humans. This transformation is so complete that it is undetectable by most conventional means.
  • Extreme Longevity: Makluans have extraordinarily long lifespans, verging on biological immortality. They can live for many thousands of Earth years without showing signs of aging.
  • Superhuman Attributes: Even in their smaller forms, they possess strength and durability far exceeding human norms. In their true dragon forms, they are powerhouses capable of leveling cities and battling beings like Iron Man and the Hulk on equal terms.
  • Acid Mist: Many Makluans, including Fin Fang Foom, can exhale a corrosive acid mist capable of dissolving most materials.
  • Limited Telepathy: Their species communicates through a form of limited telepathy, though they are also capable of learning and speaking verbal languages.
  • Culture & Society:
  • Dualistic Philosophy: Makluan society is defined by a philosophical schism between its peaceful, scientific pursuits and a latent, honor-bound warrior ethos. While many are content as scholars and explorers, a significant faction believes in the glory of conquest and the expansion of their empire.
  • Patience & Long-Term Planning: Their longevity informs their entire cultural outlook. They are masters of long-term strategy, willing to wait for centuries or even millennia for their plans to come to fruition, as seen with their infiltration of Earth.
  • Technological Prowess: Their culture places a high value on scientific achievement, leading to the creation of advanced technology that is far beyond human comprehension.
  • Technology: The Ten Rings of Power:
  • The pinnacle of their known technology is the set of ten rings salvaged from the Axon-Karr. Each ring is a distinct piece of hardware containing the “spirit” of a legendary cosmic warrior, trapped in a phantom-like state within the device, which the wielder can then command. Each ring has a specific, unique function:

^ Ring ^ Finger Worn On ^ Primary Function ^

Ice Blast / “Zero” Left Little Finger Emits intense cold and can create ice constructs.
Mento-Intensifier / “The Liar” Left Ring Finger Amplifies psychic energy, allowing for mental illusions and paralysis.
Electro-Blast / “Lightning” Left Middle Finger Generates powerful electrical blasts.
Flame Blast / “The Incandescent” Left Index Finger Projects infrared radiation and intense heat, creating bursts of flame.
White Light / “Daimonic” Left Thumb Emits various forms of electromagnetic energy, including blinding light.
Matter Rearranger / “Remaker” Right Thumb Can manipulate the atomic and molecular structure of matter.
Impact Beam / “Influence” Right Index Finger Projects a powerful concussive force beam.
Vortex Beam / “Spin” Right Middle Finger Creates high-speed air vortexes, enabling flight and powerful winds.
Disintegration Beam / “Spectral” Right Ring Finger Emits a beam that destroys the bonds between atoms, capable of vaporizing objects.
Black Light / “Nightbringer” Right Little Finger Creates an area of absolute darkness that absorbs all light.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

  • Biology & Culture: Entirely unknown. As the species has never been depicted, no information exists about their appearance, abilities, or societal structure. The only clues are in their technology, which suggests a mastery of energy manipulation and possibly interdimensional or interstellar travel.
  • Technology: The Ten Rings Artifact:
  • Appearance: In a major departure from the comics, the MCU's Ten Rings are not finger rings but ten interconnected, metallic bracelets worn on the user's forearms. They glow with an internal energy, typically blue for Wenwu and a warmer gold/orange for Shang-Chi and his mother, Ying Li.
  • Unified Power Set: Rather than ten distinct powers, the MCU rings function as a single, versatile weapon system. Their abilities include:
    • Enhanced Physicality: Granting the wielder superhuman strength, agility, and durability.
    • Longevity: The rings completely halt the wielder's aging process, allowing Wenwu to live for a thousand years.
    • Energy Manipulation: They can be fired as powerful projectile blasts, used to create energy whips and shields, and serve as platforms for enhanced movement and leaps.
    • Remote Control: The wielder can mentally control the rings even after they have been launched, allowing for complex, multi-vector attacks.
  • Mysterious Origin: The rings' composition is unknown to Earth's and the galaxy's most brilliant minds. Their most significant feature is the beacon they activate after Wenwu's death, suggesting they are a piece of a much larger cosmic puzzle. This reframes them not just as a weapon, but as a key, a map, or a distress call. The reason for this change is likely to streamline their powers for visual storytelling and to create a more compelling central mystery for future MCU phases.
  • Earth-616: The relationship between the Makluans and the Mandarin is one of profound antagonism and mutual exploitation. He is the thief who stole their birthright, the very source of their power on Earth. They view him as an arrogant, inferior creature who desecrated their technology. The Mandarin, in turn, sees the Makluans as fools who left the ultimate power lying in the dirt, and he despises them for viewing him as unworthy of it. Their conflict culminated in a desperate, temporary alliance against a common foe, but their core dynamic is one of usurper versus the scorned original owners.
  • MCU: There is no relationship between Wenwu and the creators of the rings. For him, the rings are a tool of immense power whose origins are irrelevant. He defines the rings; they do not define him beyond granting him his power. The potential future relationship between the MCU's heroes and the rings' creators is the central mystery, but Wenwu's role was that of a powerful, long-term wielder, not a knowing participant in any alien's plan.

Fin Fang Foom is the face of the Makluan race in the Marvel Universe. He is their most powerful warrior, their living superweapon, and their most enduring legacy. Initially, he was a loyal servant of the Makluan cause, the designated “dragon” to be unleashed upon humanity. However, following his people's defeat, he has become a force of his own. He has been manipulated by others (including the Mandarin), fought against nearly every major hero on Earth, and has even had brief, bizarre periods of attempted reformation, such as when he used his shapeshifting abilities to become a chef at a Chinese restaurant. He embodies the raw, untamed power of his species, a primal threat that can never be truly vanquished.

  • Earth-616: Iron Man's connection to the Makluans is primarily through the Mandarin. For years, Tony Stark fought against the pinnacle of Makluan technology without ever knowing its true origin. His battles against the Mandarin's rings were a constant test of his own technological innovation. When the Makluans themselves finally emerged, Tony was forced to ally with his greatest enemy to stop a planetary threat, showcasing the scale of the Makluan menace.
  • MCU: The connection is more thematic and foundational. The Ten Rings organization, empowered by the (unbeknownst to them) Makluan-adjacent artifacts, was directly responsible for Tony Stark's kidnapping in Afghanistan. This event was the crucible in which Iron Man was born. Therefore, the legacy of this mysterious alien race is inextricably linked to the very beginning of the MCU's Age of Heroes. A piece of their forgotten technology was the catalyst for the creation of the universe's first public superhero.

The Dragon Seed Saga (Iron Man vol. 1 #270-275)

This is the definitive Makluan storyline. The Mandarin, seeking even greater power, travels to the Valley of the Sleeping Dragon and discovers the truth behind his rings. He awakens not just Fin Fang Foom but the other ten members of the Axon-Karr crew. They reveal their dragon forms and their plan to conquer Earth, quickly dismissing the Mandarin as an insignificant thief. The dragons proceed to rampage across China, proving to be an unstoppable force. In a shocking twist, Iron Man and the Mandarin are forced to forge a desperate alliance. Combining the power of Tony's armor with the full might of all Ten Rings, the Mandarin channels a devastating energy blast that seemingly obliterates the Makluan warriors, though Fin Fang Foom would inevitably survive. This arc fundamentally rewrote the history of both Fin Fang Foom and the Mandarin, establishing the Makluans as a cornerstone of Iron Man's lore.

Fin Fang Foom's Monster Rampages (Various)

Beyond his origin story, Fin Fang Foom has reappeared numerous times as a major threat. His debut in Strange Tales #89 saw him awakened by a young boy and subsequently tricked back into hibernation. He has since been unleashed to fight Thor, the Hulk, and other powerful heroes. He was a key member of the “Fin Fang Four” in the Fear Itself event. Each appearance reinforces his status as an alpha-level threat, a walking natural disaster that requires a significant response from Earth's heroes. His recurring presence ensures that the legacy of the Makluans—one of immense, destructive power—is never forgotten.

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (MCU Film)

This film is the primary source for all MCU information on the rings and, by extension, their creators. The story follows Wenwu's thousand-year reign and his eventual attempt to breach the Dark Gate in Ta Lo, manipulated by the whispers of the Dweller-in-Darkness. The film redefines the rings as a legacy weapon, passed from Wenwu to his son, Shang-Chi. The moment Shang-Chi takes control of the rings, their energy shifts color, signifying a new master and a new purpose. The film's conclusion, with the rings sending their mysterious beacon, transforms the artifacts from a simple weapon into the MCU's next great cosmic mystery, making the unnamed “Makluan” race a significant future plot element.

This animated series offered a unique and compelling take on the Makluan mythos. The Ten Rings were not merely technology but magical artifacts, each containing the spirit of a legendary Makluan warlord. The young Mandarin of this series was on a quest to gather all ten rings to prevent a prophesied Makluan invasion. Fin Fang Foom served as the guardian of one of the rings. This version intertwined the technological and mystical, making the rings a prison for ancient spirits and a key to either saving or damning the world.

In the pocket universe created by Franklin Richards, the Mandarin's origin was reimagined. Here, his rings were not of Makluan origin but were instead discovered in the wreckage of a Kree starship. This alternate take links one of Iron Man's greatest foes to the cosmic lore of Captain Marvel and the Fantastic Four, showing how the “mysterious alien tech” trope can be adapted to fit different corners of the Marvel Universe.

Warren Ellis and Stuart Immonen's highly satirical and non-canonical series Nextwave presented a memorable version of Fin Fang Foom. Captured by the Beyond Corporation©, he was repeatedly cloned and modified into a bio-weapon, famously being forced to wear purple underpants. While a comedic take, it demonstrated the character's iconic status, showing he was recognizable enough to be effectively parodied as a giant, pants-wearing monster.


1)
The name “Makluan” is widely believed to be a tribute to the Canadian philosopher Marshall McLuhan, whose work on media and technology was highly influential.
2)
Prior to the 1991 retcon, Fin Fang Foom was considered part of a race of slumbering dragons native to Earth, a concept later retconned to be a deception created by the Makluans.
3)
The monster-centric comics of the late 1950s and early 1960s, where Fin Fang Foom debuted, are often referred to by fans and historians as Marvel's “Atlas Era” or “Monster Era.” Other creatures from this period, like Groot and Orrgo, were later integrated into the mainstream Marvel Universe.
4)
In the comics, the Mandarin was so proficient with the rings that he could continue to control them telepathically even when they were not on his hands.
5)
The design of the MCU's Ten Rings as forearm bracelets was heavily inspired by the iron rings used in the Hung Gar style of Chinese martial arts, as featured in the 2004 film Kung Fu Hustle.
6)
Key comic book issues for Makluan lore include: Strange Tales #89 (Fin Fang Foom's first appearance), Tales of Suspense #50 (The Mandarin's first appearance), and Iron Man #270-275 (The Dragon Seed Saga, which formally introduces the Makluans).
7)
In some comic storylines, Fin Fang Foom has demonstrated the ability to shrink himself down to a human-sized form, a variation of his species' shapeshifting ability.