Supergiant

  • Core Identity: Supergiant is a mentally unstable, omega-level telepathic parasite and a founding member of Thanos's fanatically loyal Black Order, serving as his chief mental inquisitor and psychological terror weapon.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: As one of the five original Dreadlords of Thanos, Supergiant is a cosmic predator who scours the galaxy for intelligent life. Her purpose is not simple conquest but the gluttonous consumption of minds, stealing secrets, memories, and intellect to feed her parasitic nature and serve the Mad Titan's ambitions. She represents pure psionic terror in the Marvel cosmos. black_order.
  • Primary Impact: Supergiant's most significant mark on the Marvel Universe was during the Infinity event, where she was instrumental in the invasion of Earth. She single-handedly broke the defenses of wakanda, mentally subjugated the Inhuman king black_bolt, and nearly activated a planet-destroying weapon, cementing her reputation as one of the most dangerous psionic threats in existence.
  • Key Incarnations: The most critical distinction is her complete absence from the core lineup of the Marvel Cinematic Universe's Black Order. While a foundational member in the comics, her role was largely absorbed by ebony_maw in the films, making her a “comic-book only” character for many mainstream fans.

Supergiant made her dramatic debut in the prelude to Marvel's 2013 summer crossover event, first appearing in New Avengers Vol. 3 #8 (September 2013) in a shadowy cameo, before her full introduction in Infinity #1 (October 2013). She was co-created by the prolific writer Jonathan Hickman and artists Jerome Opeña and Jim Cheung as a core component of his newly conceived supervillain team, the Black Order. The creation of the Black Order, also known as the Cull Obsidian, was a deliberate move by Hickman to give Thanos a new and genuinely formidable entourage. For years, Thanos had often operated alone or with temporary, lesser-known underlings. Hickman sought to craft a team that reflected the Mad Titan's power and cruelty—a dark cabinet of cosmic warlords, each a specialist in a different form of death and destruction. Supergiant was designed to be the team's psychic powerhouse, a character whose threat was not physical but mental and deeply insidious. Her design, with her wraith-like appearance and stark black and white color scheme, immediately set her apart as a creature of nightmare, perfectly embodying her role as a telepathic predator. Her introduction during the Infinity event was timed to present an overwhelming, multi-front threat to a Marvel Universe whose primary defenders, the Avengers, were off-planet.

In-Universe Origin Story

The history of Supergiant is intentionally shrouded in mystery, enhancing her terrifying persona. Unlike her comrades corvus_glaive or proxima_midnight, she has no known home world or species, leading to speculation that she may be a unique entity in the universe.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Supergiant's past is a void. She is described not by a history, but by her nature: she is a telepathic parasite. Her existence is defined by a ravenous hunger for intelligence. She is a psychic scavenger who drifts through the cosmos, drawn to powerful intellects and vast reservoirs of knowledge like a predator to a scent. When she finds a worthy mind, she attacks, consumes its thoughts, memories, and secrets, and leaves behind a hollowed-out husk. It was this unique and terrifying hunger that brought her to the attention of the Black Order. corvus_glaive, Thanos's right hand, discovered her during one of his campaigns and recognized her immense potential as a weapon of psychological warfare. He brought her before Thanos, who was impressed by her raw psionic power and utter lack of morality. She, in turn, found in Thanos a being whose intellect and ambition were a worthy cause to dedicate her existence to. She pledged her undying loyalty, viewing the Mad Titan not merely as a master but as a godlike figure whose grand vision of cosmic death was something to be worshipped. She became one of his five Dreadlords, the general in charge of mental infiltration and espionage. While Cull Obsidian would shatter armies and Proxima Midnight would slay champions, Supergiant's role was to break the enemy's will, steal their most valuable secrets, and turn their greatest strengths against them from the inside out. Her origin is not a story of a planet or a people, but of a singular, cosmic horror finding its purpose in the service of universal annihilation.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

Supergiant does not exist within the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) canon as depicted in the films Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame. Despite being a founding member of the Black Order in the comics, she was conspicuously omitted from the on-screen team. The MCU's Black Order, referred to by Thanos as the “Children of Thanos,” was streamlined to a quartet: Corvus Glaive, Proxima Midnight, Ebony Maw, and Cull Obsidian (who was renamed from his comic counterpart, Black Dwarf). The reasons for her exclusion from the films have never been officially stated by Marvel Studios, but several strategic and narrative factors likely contributed to the decision:

  • Narrative Economy & Focus: Juggling four new villains was already a significant challenge for the densely packed narratives of Infinity War and Endgame. Adding a fifth member would have further diluted the screen time and development for each, potentially making them feel less threatening. The filmmakers opted for a more focused group where each member had a clearer, more distinct role.
  • Power Set Overlap: Supergiant's primary abilities are telepathy and mind control. In the MCU, the character of ebony_maw was given a significantly expanded power set, combining his comic book talent for persuasion with powerful telekinesis. This cinematic version of Maw effectively absorbed the “non-physical threat” niche. Including Supergiant would have created a redundancy in powers, as both characters would be seen as the “psychic” or “magical” members of the team. Maw's visually dynamic telekinesis was also arguably more suited for large-scale action sequences than Supergiant's more internal, mind-based powers.
  • Streamlined Team Dynamics: The MCU's Black Order was presented as a twisted family unit. The relationship between Corvus Glaive and Proxima Midnight was hinted at, and Maw served as Thanos's fanatical herald. Cull Obsidian was the simple muscle. Supergiant's “mentally unstable parasite” persona, while compelling, might have been a more complex and difficult element to integrate smoothly into this dynamic without more dedicated screen time.

Although absent from the final films, concept art created during the pre-production of Infinity War by artists like Jerad S. Marantz confirms that Supergiant was considered for inclusion. These early designs often depicted her with an alien, almost serpentine appearance, staying true to her comic book origins as a non-humanoid threat. Her exclusion remains a key point of divergence between the comics and the MCU and a frequent topic of discussion among fans.

Supergiant's threat level is immense, stemming almost entirely from her phenomenal and terrifying psionic abilities. She is a living weapon of psychological destruction.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

Powers and Abilities

  • Omega-Level Telepathy: Supergiant's primary and most formidable power is her telepathy, which operates on a cosmic scale. Her capabilities are vast and multi-faceted:
    • Mind Control: She can seize control of another being's mind, completely overriding their free will and turning them into a puppet. She has demonstrated the power to control multiple individuals simultaneously and has even taken control of extremely powerful and will-strong beings like black_bolt, the King of the Inhumans.
    • Intellect Devouring: This is the core of her parasitic nature. She can psionically consume the mind of her target, stealing their knowledge, memories, skills, and secrets. This process not only empowers her with new information but also leaves her victims mentally shattered or braindead.
    • Psionic Blasts: She can project raw, concussive blasts of psychic energy capable of incapacitating or killing opponents, as well as destroying physical objects.
    • Mental Possession/Consciousness Transfer: Supergiant is not entirely bound to her physical form. She can transfer her consciousness into other beings or even into pure energy, allowing her to survive the destruction of her body. This makes her exceptionally difficult to kill permanently.
    • Psychic Illusions & Deception: She is a master of mental manipulation, capable of creating hyper-realistic illusions to deceive and terrorize her enemies.
    • Pain Induction: She can telepathically induce unbearable physical or emotional pain in others.
  • Intangibility: Supergiant can render her body intangible, allowing her to phase through solid objects and physical attacks. This makes her an elusive and frustrating opponent in direct combat, as most conventional attacks simply pass through her.
  • Superhuman Physiology: Though her exact species is unknown, she possesses physical attributes far beyond human limits, including superhuman strength, speed, durability, and reflexes. However, she is not on the same physical level as powerhouses like Cull Obsidian or Proxima Midnight and relies on her psionic and phasing abilities in a fight.

Equipment Supergiant does not rely on any specific technology or weaponry. Her body and mind are her weapons. Personality Supergiant's personality is as terrifying as her powers. She is defined by a profound and sadistic cruelty, taking immense pleasure in the psychological torture of her victims. She is not content to simply kill; she revels in breaking minds, dissecting psyches, and turning a person's own thoughts into their worst enemy. She is described as “mentally unstable,” exhibiting a gleeful, almost child-like delight in chaos and suffering, which makes her actions dangerously unpredictable. Her most dominant trait, however, is her fanatical, worshipful devotion to Thanos. She does not merely serve him out of fear or for personal gain; she genuinely believes in his nihilistic cause and sees him as a transcendent being. Her every action is an attempt to please him, and the thought of his approval is her greatest desire, while the thought of his disappointment is her greatest fear.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

As Supergiant is not present in the MCU, her abilities in this continuity are purely speculative. However, by analyzing the established visual language and power scaling of the films, one can construct a theoretical profile. Hypothetical MCU Abilities

  • Psionic Energy Manipulation: Were she adapted for the screen, her telepathy would likely be depicted visually, similar to how Scarlet Witch's powers manifest as red energy. Supergiant's psionic attacks would likely have a distinct color, perhaps a cold blue or ethereal purple, to differentiate them. This would manifest as visible waves of energy for mind control, glowing effects around a target's head, and powerful concussive blasts.
  • Mind Control: Her core ability would remain. In the context of Infinity War, her role could have been to mentally assault the Avengers during the Battle of Wakanda, turning heroes against each other or attempting to psionically rip the Mind Stone from Vision's head—a more direct mental assault compared to Corvus Glaive's physical attempts.
  • Infiltration: Her intangibility would make her the team's ultimate infiltrator, capable of phasing into secure locations like the Avengers Compound or Doctor Strange's Sanctum Sanctorum undetected.

A cinematic Supergiant would have likely filled the role of the “specialist” infiltrator and psychological weapon. Her fight scenes would be less about physical brawling and more about turning the environment and the heroes' allies against them. Her defeat would have required a powerful psychic or magic-user like Scarlet Witch or Doctor Strange to engage her on the astral or mental plane, offering a different type of conflict than the physical brawls that dominated the Children of Thanos's other fights.

Supergiant's world revolves around her master and her violent siblings-in-arms. Her relationships are forged not in camaraderie but in shared devotion to destruction.

  • Thanos: The absolute center of her universe. Supergiant's loyalty to Thanos is absolute and fanatical. She views him as a cosmic deity and hangs on his every word, desperately seeking his validation. She is arguably the most sycophantic of the Black Order, her sadism a direct reflection of her desire to prove her worth to her master. Unlike Ebony Maw, whose silver-tongued praise can seem self-serving, Supergiant's devotion appears pure and unwavering.
  • The Black Order: Her fellow generals. While they fight for the same cause, their relationships are fraught with professional rivalry and jealousy.
    • Corvus Glaive: As Thanos's favored general and official second-in-command, Supergiant respects his position but also competes with him for their master's attention. They are a study in contrasts: Corvus the immortal strategist, Supergiant the unstable psionic bomb.
    • Proxima Midnight: The greatest warrior of the Order. There is a degree of professional respect between them, as both are supremely effective killers. However, Proxima's straightforward approach to combat likely clashes with Supergiant's preference for psychological torment.
    • Ebony Maw: Her most direct rival. Both are manipulators who operate in the non-physical realm. Maw uses persuasion and subtle telekinesis, while Supergiant employs overwhelming psychic force. They are two sides of the same coin, and a deep-seated competition exists between them to prove whose methods are more effective in breaking their enemies.
    • Cull Obsidian (Black Dwarf): She likely views the brutish powerhouse of the group as little more than a living battering ram. She sees his reliance on physical force as crude and unsophisticated compared to her own elegant mastery of the mind.
  • Black Bolt & The Inhumans: During the Infinity event, Supergiant was dispatched to the Inhuman city of Attilan. Her primary adversary became its king, Black Bolt. The silent monarch, whose slightest whisper could shatter mountains, represented the ultimate challenge for a telepath. She succeeded in taking control of his mind, a terrifying feat that turned one of Earth's most powerful defenders into Thanos's weapon. This conflict remains her defining moment.
  • The Illuminati and The Avengers: As the masterminds behind Earth's defense, the Illuminati (including Black Panther, Iron Man, and Doctor Strange) were Supergiant's primary targets in her search for the Infinity Gems. Her invasion of Wakanda brought her into direct conflict with Black Panther and his forces, as well as any X-Men and Avengers present. She views them not as individuals but as obstacles to Thanos's will.
  • Lockjaw: In a moment of supreme irony, Supergiant's ultimate defeat during Infinity came not at the hands of a powerful hero, but from the Inhumans' teleporting bulldog, Lockjaw. As she was about to detonate a world-ending bomb under Black Bolt's control, Lockjaw teleported himself and Supergiant to a distant, uninhabited planet seconds before the explosion, sacrificing himself 1) to end her threat.
  • The Black Order (Cull Obsidian): This is Supergiant's sole and defining affiliation. The Black Order is not simply a team; it is a death cult organized around the worship of Thanos. Each member is a “Dreadlord,” a general personally chosen by Thanos to lead his armies. Their purpose is to travel to planets ahead of their master, demanding a tribute: the heads of the planet's young. Any world that refuses faces complete annihilation at the hands of the Order. Supergiant's role within this structure is to be the scalpel that dissects the enemy's mind before the hammer of the full army falls.

Supergiant's tenure in the Marvel comics has been short but incredibly impactful, centered around two major storylines.

Infinity (2013)

The Infinity event is Supergiant's magnum opus and the storyline for which she is best known.

  • Premise: With the majority of the Avengers off-world fighting a cosmic war against the Builders, Thanos sees an opportunity to invade an under-defended Earth. His publicly stated goal is to find and kill his long-lost Inhuman son, Thane. To this end, he dispatches his five Dreadlords of the Black Order to different locations on Earth to crush its defenses and locate his target.
  • Supergiant's Arc: Supergiant is assigned the most difficult intelligence target: Wakanda, the technologically advanced and secretive nation ruled by Black Panther, who is also a member of the Illuminati. Supergiant knows the Illuminati are hiding something of immense value (the Infinity Gems). She effortlessly bypasses Wakanda's formidable defenses, using her intangibility and telepathy to turn their own soldiers and technology against them. She psychologically tortures Black Panther, trying to force him to reveal the location of the gems. Her assault culminates in a direct attack on the Inhuman city of Attilan, where she achieves her greatest victory: taking complete mental control of Black Bolt.
  • Lasting Impact: Using the enslaved Black Bolt, Supergiant activates an Antimatter Injection Bomb created by the Illuminati, intending to destroy Earth. In her moment of triumph, she is thwarted by Lockjaw, who teleports them both away to their apparent deaths. This storyline established Supergiant as an A-list cosmic threat capable of mentally defeating one of the most powerful beings on the planet.

Avengers: No Surrender (2018)

After being presumed dead for years, Supergiant made a shocking return in the pages of the weekly Avengers storyline “No Surrender.”

  • Premise: The Earth is stolen and becomes the game board for a contest between two cosmic elders of the universe: the Grandmaster and the newly introduced Challenger. Both entities assemble teams of powerful beings to fight on their behalf, with the fate of the planet hanging in the balance.
  • Supergiant's Arc: The Challenger resurrects a new, more lethal version of the Black Order to serve as his team, and Supergiant is among them. It's revealed that her consciousness survived the explosion during Infinity by converting itself into pure psychic energy, which lay dormant until the Challenger gave her a new physical form. She is more powerful and unstable than ever, serving as the Challenger's primary psionic weapon. She engages multiple Avengers, proving to be a formidable foe once again.
  • Lasting Impact: Her second tenure was shorter. She is ultimately defeated in a psychic battle with the newly empowered Quasar (Avril Kincaid), who manages to overload and dissipate her psychic form. While this appearance was brief, it reaffirmed her status as a recurring cosmic threat and demonstrated her unique ability to cheat death.

Due to her relatively recent creation and absence from the MCU films, Supergiant has not had as many alternate reality versions as more established characters. However, she has found a significant presence in other media, which has greatly expanded her exposure to fans.

  • Video Games: Supergiant has been a popular character in several Marvel mobile and console games, often appearing as a villainous boss or even a playable character.
    • Marvel: Avengers Alliance (2012-2016): Supergiant was featured as a boss in this turn-based RPG on Facebook. Her in-game abilities mirrored her comic powers, including mind control and psionic attacks.
    • Marvel: Future Fight (2015-Present): She is a prominent “World Boss” and a powerful playable character. Her inclusion in this massively popular game is a primary reason for her continued relevance among a large segment of the Marvel fanbase. Her move set includes psychic blasts, mind control, and summoning illusions.
    • Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order (2019): In this Nintendo Switch exclusive, the main storyline is an adaptation of the Infinity saga. Supergiant appears as a key boss, fighting the heroes alongside the rest of the Black Order in a memorable encounter in the Inhuman city of Attilan.
  • Animation: Supergiant has appeared alongside the rest of the Black Order in several animated series, giving fans a chance to see her in action outside of the comic panels.
    • Avengers Assemble (2013-2019): She appears in the third season, Ultron Revolution, as part of Thanos's Black Order. Her depiction is largely faithful to the comics, serving as the team's telepath.
    • Guardians of the Galaxy (2015-2019): She also appears in this series, again as a member of the Black Order, menacing the titular team and the wider cosmos under Thanos's command. These animated appearances are significant as they represent a version of the team that includes its full, original roster.

1)
He was later revealed to have survived.
2)
Supergiant's name, like other cosmic Marvel characters, is astronomical. A supergiant is a type of extremely large and luminous star, fitting the cosmic scope of Thanos and his followers.
3)
In the comics, the team is most often called the Black Order, but the term “Cull Obsidian” is also used to refer to the group as a whole. The MCU simplified this by renaming the character of Black Dwarf to Cull Obsidian and exclusively using “the Black Order” or “Children of Thanos” for the team name.
4)
Supergiant's initial death occurs in Infinity #6 (December 2013). Her resurrection is revealed in Avengers #676 (February 2018), and her second defeat occurs in Avengers #689 (June 2018).
5)
Concept art by Jerad S. Marantz for a planned MCU version of Supergiant was released publicly in his art books and online, showing that her inclusion was seriously considered during the development of Avengers: Infinity War. The designs often featured a more spectral or serpentine body.
6)
Due to her ability to control minds as powerful as Black Bolt's and her consciousness's ability to survive bodily death, a strong argument can be made that Supergiant is, situationally, the most dangerous member of the Black Order, even more so than the immortal Corvus Glaive or the physically imposing Cull Obsidian.