Secret Wars (2015)
Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary
- Core Identity: Secret Wars (2015) is the climactic Marvel Comics crossover event that chronicles the death of the entire Marvel Multiverse at the hands of the Beyonders and its subsequent, temporary rebirth as a singular patchwork reality known as Battleworld, ruled by the iron will of a god-like Doctor Doom.
- Key Takeaways:
- Role in the Universe: This event served as the definitive conclusion to writer Jonathan Hickman's multi-year narrative arc on the Avengers and New Avengers titles, which centered on the “Incursions”—a multiversal decay phenomenon where parallel Earths collided, with one or both being annihilated. The Incursions were the central engine driving the plot towards this inevitable finale.
- Primary Impact: Secret Wars effectively ended the classic Marvel Universe (Earth-616) and the Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610), among all others. Its aftermath led to a “soft reboot” of the entire publishing line under the “All-New, All-Different Marvel” banner, creating a new Prime Earth that integrated key characters and concepts from other realities, most notably miles_morales from the Ultimate Universe.
- Key Incarnations: In the comics, this event is a direct, cataclysmic finale to a long-running, intricate storyline. The upcoming Marvel Cinematic Universe film, `Avengers: Secret Wars`, is expected to be a thematic adaptation rather than a direct one. While it will likely involve multiversal conflict and possibly a version of battleworld, it will be built upon the MCU's established lore of incursions (introduced in `doctor_strange_in_the_multiverse_of_madness`) and multiversal travel, not the specific Beyonder/Doctor Doom plot from the 2015 comic.
Part 2: Origin and Evolution
Publication History and Creation
The 2015 Secret Wars event was the masterwork of writer Jonathan Hickman, with principal art by the celebrated Esad Ribić and colors by Ive Svorcina. It was not a standalone event but the meticulously planned culmination of Hickman's entire tenure at Marvel, which began years earlier. The conceptual seeds were planted throughout his run on Fantastic Four and FF, but the direct prelude began in 2012 with the launch of his Avengers and New Avengers series as part of the “Marvel NOW!” initiative. New Avengers, in particular, served as the primary vehicle for the overarching plot. From its very first issue, it introduced the concept of Incursions and the desperate, morally compromising actions the Illuminati took to prevent them. Hickman described his entire saga as a single, long-form story: “Everything leads to everything.” For three years, every arc, every character decision, and every cosmic revelation was a carefully placed domino leading to the multiversal collapse depicted in Secret Wars. The main series was an oversized, nine-issue limited series that ran from May 2015 to January 2016 (experiencing some delays due to its intricate art). It was supported by a massive number of tie-in miniseries under banners like “Battleworld,” “Warzones,” and “Last Days,” which explored the different domains of the patchwork planet and chronicled the final moments of various heroes before the universe ended. The event was a massive commercial and critical success, praised for its epic scale, complex themes, and satisfying conclusion to one of modern comics' most ambitious storylines.
In-Universe Origin Story
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
The origin of Secret Wars is the story of the end of everything. The phenomenon known as the Incursions was an unstoppable chain reaction of cosmic decay. Parallel universes began drifting into one another, with their respective Earths as the focal point. When two Earths from different universes occupied the same space, a violent collision would occur, annihilating both universes entirely. The only way to prevent this mutual destruction was for one of the Earths to be destroyed before the collision, which would save both universes but at a horrific moral cost. The Illuminati—a secret council of Earth-616's greatest minds including Mr. Fantastic, Iron Man, Doctor Strange, Black Panther, Namor, and Black Bolt—discovered this threat early on. They secretly built planet-killing weapons and, in agonizing secrecy, destroyed multiple uninhabited and later inhabited Earths to save their own. This created a profound schism within the group, particularly between Black Panther and Namor, and ultimately led to their exposure and conflict with Captain America and the Avengers. The true cause of the Incursions was revealed to be a plan enacted by the enigmatic and omnipotent beings known as the beyonders. They were, in essence, conducting an experiment to see what would happen if they killed the Multiverse simultaneously. They had murdered the cosmic entities in each reality, including the Living Tribunal, and set the Incursions in motion as a failsafe. Their ultimate goal was to detonate the Molecule Man of every reality at once, using him as a multiversal bomb to wipe the slate clean. As the Incursion crisis reached its peak, heroes and villains alike scrambled for a solution. Reed Richards constructed a “life raft” designed to survive the end of all things. Concurrently, the villainous Cabal, led by thanos and Namor, also built a raft. In the final moments, the Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610) was on a collision course with the Prime Universe (Earth-616). Despite a final, epic battle between the heroes of both worlds, the end came. The Multiverse died. However, a small contingent of heroes and villains survived aboard their respective life rafts. And one man, Doctor Doom, armed with knowledge stolen from the Beyonders and aided by the Molecule Man, confronted the omnipotent beings at the moment of creation. He managed to steal their power, kill them, and use the remnants of the dead multiverse to forge a new, singular reality from sheer force of will: Battleworld.
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
As of now, the 2015 Secret Wars event has not occurred in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The upcoming film `Avengers: Secret Wars` is expected to draw inspiration from this event and its 1984 predecessor, but it will be an original story rooted in the MCU's unique continuity. The MCU has, however, laid significant groundwork for a similar cataclysm. The concept of Incursions was officially introduced in `doctor_strange_in_the_multiverse_of_madness`. There, the Earth-838 version of Reed Richards explains that an Incursion is a “collision of two universes that results in the destruction of one or both.” He reveals that their universe's Doctor Strange caused one by dreamwalking into another reality, forcing the Illuminati of 838 to kill him to prevent a larger catastrophe. The film's post-credits scene shows the MCU's Doctor Strange being recruited by clea to fix an Incursion he himself has caused, confirming this is a major, ongoing threat. The MCU's “Multiverse Saga” (Phases 4-6) has been built around the consequences of a branching, chaotic multiverse, first established in the `Loki` series. The death of He Who Remains shattered the Sacred Timeline, allowing infinite parallel realities to exist and, crucially, interact. This sets the stage for the kind of multiversal war and collapse central to Secret Wars. The key difference is the antagonist. In the comics, the Beyonders were the architects of destruction. In the MCU, the primary multiversal threat has been established as Kang the Conqueror and his many variants. It is highly probable that the MCU's Secret Wars will position Kang, or the Council of Kangs, as the central catalyst for the multiversal war, rather than the Beyonders. The film will likely adapt core concepts—such as the collision of universes, heroes from different realities teaming up, and possibly even the creation of a patchwork “Battleworld”—but the “how” and “why” will be fundamentally tied to Kang's saga, not the intricate Doctor Doom/Beyonders/Molecule Man plot of the 2015 comic.
Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath
The Structure of Battleworld
After the death of the Multiverse, reality was reforged by Doctor Doom into a singular planet called Battleworld. This was not a normal planet but a patchwork world constructed from the “in-cursion point” fragments of dozens of dead realities, held together by Doom's absolute power. He was not a king or an emperor; he was God, and his word was law.
- God Emperor Doom: Victor von Doom sat on the throne of Battleworld. He had absorbed the power of the Beyonders via the Molecule Man. He was omnipotent, reshaping reality and memory at will. To his subjects, he was the creator and savior who had held the world together for eight years since the “death” of the old one. He wore a white, hooded uniform and his face, once scarred, was now perfect.
- The Court of Doom:
- Doctor Strange: Stephen Strange had become Doom's right-hand man, his Sheriff. Strange remembered the old world and helped Doom craft Battleworld, believing it was the only way to save anything from total oblivion.
- Susan Storm: In this reality, Sue Storm was Doom's consort and the mother of his children, Franklin and Valeria. She had no memory of her life with Reed Richards.
- Valeria Von Doom: Valeria acted as the head of Doom's science division, the Foundation, dedicated to unearthing artifacts from the “old world” (which Doom had outlawed).
- The Thor Corps: Serving as Battleworld's unassailable police force, the Thor Corps was comprised of thousands of different versions of Thor (and others worthy of wielding a Mjolnir) from across the dead multiverse. They answered directly to God Doom and administered his justice.
- The Domains: Battleworld was divided into distinct kingdoms or “domains,” each a fragment of a dead universe. Each domain was ruled by a “Baron” or “Baroness” appointed by and loyal to Doom. Conflicts between domains were forbidden.
^ Selected Domains of Battleworld ^
| Domain | Baron/Ruler | Description |
| The Kingdom of Manhattan | Multiple | A fusion of Earth-616 and Earth-1610 Manhattan, a highly contested territory. |
| Greenland | A variant of The Hulk (The Maestro) | A desolate wasteland populated by gamma-irradiated creatures. |
| The Regency | Tony Stark | A technologically advanced kingdom reminiscent of a futuristic utopia. |
| The Deadlands | Apocalypse | A region overrun by zombies, separated from other domains by a massive wall. |
| Westchester | A variant of Charles Xavier | Home to a school for gifted youngsters in a realm where the X-Men were the dominant power. |
| Higher Avalon | Brian Braddock (Captain Britain) | A fantasy-inspired domain protected by the Captain Britain Corps. |
| Utopolis | A variant of Hyperion | A seemingly perfect city ruled by the Squadron Sinister. |
A massive wall known as The Shield, run by a variant of Abigail Brand and staffed by an army of outcasts and criminals, protected the civilized domains from the horrors of the Deadlands (zombies), Perfection (the Annihilation Wave), and New Xandar (a realm of Ultron drones).
Key Narrative Turning Points
The main Secret Wars series follows the survivors of the 616 and 1610 life rafts as they awaken on Battleworld eight years after its creation and shatter Doom's fragile peace.
- The Awakening: Two life rafts arrive on Battleworld. The first contains the heroes of Earth-616 (Reed Richards, Black Panther, Captain Marvel, etc.). The second holds the villains of the Cabal, led by Thanos. They are discovered by Sheriff Strange and the Thor Corps.
- The Seeds of Doubt: The heroes are shocked to find a world that worships Doom as a god. Doctor Strange, realizing who they are, protects them and reveals the truth: Doom saved them all but rewrote history and reality. He admits his own complicity in this grand deception.
- The Cabal's Rampage: Thanos and the Cabal are unleashed and begin a brutal campaign across Battleworld, directly challenging Doom's authority.
- The Death of the Sheriff: In a major confrontation, Cyclops, empowered by the Phoenix Force from his domain, directly attacks God Emperor Doom. Doom effortlessly snaps Cyclops's neck. When Doctor Strange teleports the other survivors away to safety, defying a direct order, Doom kills his only friend without hesitation.
- The Rise of the Prophet: The Cabal's leader, a version of Maximus the Mad, begins spreading the “heresy” that Doom is not a god but just a man, sparking rebellion across various domains.
- The Secret War: Reed Richards and his 1610 counterpart, The Maker, begin working in parallel to find a way to defeat Doom. The heroes, now led by Black Panther (who has found a reality's worth of Infinity Stones), rally the disgruntled Barons and armies of the dead for an all-out assault on Castle Doom.
- The Source of Power: It is revealed that the source of Doom's godhood is the Molecule Man, Owen Reece. Doom has him hidden away, channeling the Beyonders' power through him. Strange had hidden the 616 Molecule Man, who now reveals to Reed Richards that the only way to end this is for Reed to confront Doom, while T'Challa leads the war as a diversion.
- The Final Confrontation: The final battle is not one of fists, but of ideology and will. Reed Richards confronts God Emperor Doom. Doom accuses Reed of being unable to do what was necessary, claiming Reed would have failed to save reality. He asks Reed if he, Reed Richards, could have done better. When Reed admits that yes, he could have, Doom's fragile god-complex shatters. The Molecule Man, siding with Reed, transfers the Beyonders' power from Doom to Mr. Fantastic.
The Aftermath: The All-New, All-Different Marvel
With the power of the Beyonders at his command, Reed Richards did not create another Battleworld. Instead, with the help of his son, the reality-warping Franklin Richards, he began the painstaking process of restoring the Multiverse.
- The Eighth Iteration: The old Multiverse was gone. This new one was the “Eighth Iteration.” The Prime Universe was restored, but not exactly as it was.
- Integration of Realities: Key elements and characters from other popular realities were folded into the new Prime Earth. Most significantly, Miles Morales and his entire supporting cast (his family, his friend Ganke) were now native to the main Marvel Universe, with a full history. The Molecule Man resurrected Miles's mother as a “thank you” for a hamburger Miles had given him on the life raft.
- The Fate of the Fantastic Four: Reed, Sue, Franklin, and Valeria did not return to the Prime Earth immediately. They, along with the Molecule Man, ventured into the new Multiverse, acting as cosmic architects to rebuild and explore the new realities one by one.
- Doctor Doom's Redemption?: Victor von Doom was returned to Earth, his face miraculously healed. Stripped of his power and his godhood, he was left to contemplate his actions, leading him to temporarily abandon his villainous persona and even attempt to become the new Iron Man.
- A New Status Quo: The end of Secret Wars launched the “All-New, All-Different Marvel” era. This soft reboot allowed Marvel to start fresh with new #1 issues, new teams, and a new status quo for nearly every character, providing a jumping-on point for new readers while honoring the history that led to it.
Part 4: Key Factions & Major Players
God Emperor Doom and His Court
This faction represented the absolute power and order of Battleworld. Doom's rule was tyrannical but, in his view, necessary to prevent the alternative: total nonexistence. His court was built on this foundational belief. Doctor Strange served him out of pragmatism, believing Doom was the only one capable of holding reality together. Susan Storm's loyalty was a product of Doom's reality-warping, a constructed love that nonetheless gave his rule a veneer of legitimacy. The Thor Corps were the brutal, but effective, enforcers of this order, a physical manifestation of Doom's divine law. Their collective loyalty was to the concept of order itself, which Doom personified.
The 616 Survivors
This faction represented the “memory” of the lost multiverse. Led by Reed Richards, their primary motivation was to understand what had happened and, if possible, restore what was lost. They were the ultimate agents of chaos in Doom's ordered world. Black Panther, armed with the Time and Infinity Gems, became the strategic leader of the rebellion, seeking not just restoration but also justice for Doom's hubris. Captain Marvel (Carol Danvers) and Star-Lord (Peter Quill) represented the sheer will to fight back against an oppressive god, rallying others to their cause. They were a direct challenge to Doom's narrative that he was the only savior.
The Maker and the 1610 Survivors
While also from a life raft, the survivors of the Ultimate Universe were a darker reflection of their 616 counterparts. Their leader, The Maker, is a villainous, amoral version of Reed Richards. He saw Battleworld not as a perversion to be fixed, but as a system to be understood, co-opted, and controlled. He was a pure opportunist, seeking to usurp Doom's power for himself. Miles Morales, the Spider-Man of Earth-1610, stood in stark contrast. He represented the pure, untarnished heroism of his world and became a crucial moral compass for the other survivors, ultimately being rewarded for his simple kindness in a world of cosmic gods and monsters.
The Cabal
Led by Thanos and featuring villains like Corvus Glaive, Proxima Midnight, and Terrax, this group was a force of pure nihilism. They did not seek to rule or restore Battleworld; they sought to tear it down. Having survived the end of their universe on a raft with Namor, they were unbound by Doom's laws and memories. Thanos, in particular, could not abide a reality where someone other than himself was God. Their rampage across Battleworld served as the initial catalyst that exposed the cracks in Doom's rule, forcing his hand and revealing the brutal lengths he would go to maintain control.
Part 5: Major Tie-In Series & Their Significance
//Thors//
Written by Jason Aaron, this tie-in was a police procedural set in Battleworld. It focused on the Thor Corps, specifically the “Ultimate Thor,” as he investigated a series of murders where the victims were all alternate versions of the same person: Donald Blake/Jane Foster. This series was crucial for world-building, as it explored the daily life, hierarchy, and internal politics of Doom's police force. It established how justice worked on Battleworld and showcased the sheer diversity of the dead multiverse by featuring dozens of Thor variants (including a Groot-Thor and a Destroyer-Thor). It humanized the enforcers of Doom's will, showing their doubts and their faith in his law.
//Siege//
Written by Kieron Gillen, Siege was a high-stakes action and survival story centered on Abigail Brand, the commander of the Shield—the massive wall that protected Battleworld from its most horrifying threats. The story follows her and a motley crew of outcasts, including a version of Kang, as they face their final days when the wall is breached. This series was significant for defining the borders of Doom's world and the price of his “peace.” It emphasized the theme of sacrifice and duty, as its characters were doomed to an endless fight to protect a world that saw them as disposable, all for a god they didn't necessarily trust.
//Ultimate End//
Penned by Brian Michael Bendis, the chief architect of the Ultimate Universe, this series served as the official, poignant farewell to Earth-1610. Set in the Manhattan domain where the remnants of the 616 and 1610 universes were fused together, it depicted the final, confusing, and emotional confrontation between the two sets of heroes. It explored the psychological toll of being survivors in a world that wasn't quite home and served as the narrative bridge for Miles Morales's final moments as a character from a doomed universe before his integration into the new Prime Earth.
//Old Man Logan//
This series, also by Brian Michael Bendis, followed the popular, older version of Wolverine from the dystopian future of Earth-807128. His domain is breached, and he travels across Battleworld, encountering other realities and trying to make sense of this new world. The significance of this tie-in was enormous, as it took a beloved alternate-reality character and thrust him into the main event's orbit. This directly led to Old Man Logan crossing over into the newly formed Prime Universe after Secret Wars ended, where he became a major character in the X-Men titles for several years, effectively replacing the then-deceased 616 Wolverine.
Part 6: Predecessors and Legacy
Secret Wars (1984)
The original Secret Wars, written by Jim Shooter, served as the namesake and spiritual predecessor. However, the two events are thematically and narratively poles apart.
- Premise: The 1984 event was a simpler affair. A near-omnipotent being, the Beyonder, kidnaps a collection of Marvel's most popular heroes and villains and places them on a “Battleworld” to fight, simply to observe the nature of human desire and conflict. It was a cosmic tournament. The 2015 event was a story of cosmic death and rebirth, with Battleworld being a desperate act of creation, not a game board.
- The Beyonder vs. The Beyonders: The 2015 event retroactively established that the singular, curious Beyonder from the 1984 series was, in fact, merely a “child unit” of the true Beyonders—a cold, indifferent race of beings from outside the multiverse who were its executioners, not its observers.
- Scale and Stakes: The original's stakes were the heroes' survival and a wish-fulfillment prize. The 2015 event's stakes were the existence of all reality.
Legacy and Future MCU Adaptation
The legacy of Secret Wars (2015) is immense. It provided a definitive, epic conclusion to a multi-year, critically acclaimed story, a rarity in mainstream comics. It successfully streamlined the Marvel Universe by performing a soft reboot without alienating long-time readers, skillfully integrating popular characters like Miles Morales into the main continuity. It elevated Doctor Doom to a new level of cosmic significance, recasting him not just as a supervillain but as a flawed savior and one of the most complex figures in the Marvel pantheon. For the MCU, its legacy provides a treasure trove of concepts for the upcoming film. While the plot will differ, the core ideas are ripe for adaptation:
- Battleworld: The concept of a patchwork planet made of different realities is a visually and narratively compelling idea that allows for endless character interactions and “What If?” scenarios to play out on screen.
- God Emperor Doom: The MCU has yet to introduce Doctor Doom. Secret Wars offers a path to introduce him not just as a Fantastic Four villain, but as a multiversal-level threat/savior, instantly establishing him as a character on par with Thanos.
- Multiversal War: The comic's depiction of the final Incursion, with heroes from two Earths clashing as their worlds die, is a cinematic spectacle waiting to happen.
- A Soft Reboot Mechanism: Just as in the comics, the MCU could use its version of Secret Wars to streamline its own continuity, merge different film properties (like the X-Men and Fantastic Four), and set a new status quo for its next decade of storytelling.