Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Earth X (Earth-9997) ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: In a dystopian near-future designated Earth-9997, the release of the Terrigen Mists has granted superpowers to every human on the planet, fundamentally reshaping society and forcing its aging heroes to confront the hidden, cosmic truth behind their very existence.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **A World Transformed:** The central premise of Earth X is the mutation of the entire human population. Black Bolt of the [[inhumans]] unleashed the [[terrrigen_mists]] into the atmosphere, triggering latent powers in all humans and rendering the concept of a "superhuman" obsolete. This societal upheaval led to economic collapse, widespread chaos, and a re-evaluation of what it means to be human. * **The Celestial Truth:** The series provides a groundbreaking, unified theory for superpowers in the Marvel Universe. It reveals that humanity was seeded by the cosmic [[celestials]] eons ago. The implanted Celestial embryo within the Earth's core manipulates human evolution to create super-powered beings, who act as a planetary defense system until the embryo is ready to hatch, destroying the planet in the process. Mutants, Inhumans, and other super-beings are all part of this cosmic design. * **The Watcher's Burden:** [[uatu_the_watcher]], traditionally a passive observer, plays a central, active role. Blinded by the Celestials for his past interference, he becomes the guide for the machine-man X-51 (Aaron Stack), narrating the secret history of the universe and guiding him to understand the impending threats. His narrative forms the backbone of the entire saga. * **A Dark Reflection:** Earth X is a deconstruction of the classic Marvel hero. It presents a world where the heroes have aged, grown cynical, and are haunted by their past failures. Captain America is a broken old man, Iron Man has become a reclusive industrialist in an impenetrable fortress, and Wolverine is a disillusioned drunk, locked in a bitter marriage with Jean Grey. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The //Earth X// saga was a landmark event for Marvel Comics at the turn of the millennium, first published as a 12-issue limited series (plus a #0 issue and a sketchbook) in 1999. The concept originated from the brilliant mind and artistic vision of painter [[alex_ross]], who had previously redefined the DC Universe with his seminal work, //Kingdom Come//. Ross's notes and sketches, initially intended for a potential sequel to the 1994 series //Marvels//, were expanded into a sprawling epic. To bring this complex vision to life, Marvel enlisted writer Jim Krueger, who masterfully wove Ross's concepts, character redesigns, and grand plot points into a cohesive, novelistic narrative. The distinctive, gritty, and atmospheric artwork was provided by penciler John Paul Leon, whose style perfectly complemented the story's dark, grounded tone. The original series was so successful that it spawned two direct sequels, //Universe X// (2000) and //Paradise X// (2001-2003), as well as several one-shot specials, effectively creating a self-contained trilogy that stands as one of Marvel's most ambitious and thought-provoking alternate-reality tales. The prequel series, //Marvels X//, was later published in 2020, detailing the lives of ordinary citizens as the world-altering changes began. ==== In-Universe Origin: The Genesis of a Dystopian Future ==== The timeline of Earth-9997 diverges significantly from the prime [[earth_616]] reality. The catalyst for this world's dramatic transformation was a single, desperate act by Black Bolt, King of the Inhumans. Fearing humanity's growing anti-mutant and anti-superhuman sentiment would eventually lead to the Inhumans' destruction, and believing that a world where everyone was super would lead to equality, he unleashed the Terrigen Mists into Earth's atmosphere. His gambit had catastrophic consequences. The Mists, instead of creating a utopia, plunged the world into chaos. The entire human population mutated, some gaining incredible powers while others were twisted into monstrous forms. Economies collapsed as traditional labor became meaningless. With everyone possessing powers, the status of heroes like the [[avengers]] and [[fantastic_four]] was diminished, and many of the world's greatest champions retreated from public life, unable to cope with the changed landscape. This new world order allowed for new, terrifying threats to emerge. A powerful young telepath known only as the Skull used his mind-control abilities to amass a vast army, carving a path of conquest across the United States. Meanwhile, the planet itself began to exhibit strange gravitational and magnetic fluctuations, a symptom of the gestating Celestial embryo at its core reaching maturity—a threat that Reed Richards would be the first to discover, setting the stage for the saga's central conflict. === Absence in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === To date, the Earth X reality (Earth-9997) has **not** appeared or been directly referenced within the Marvel Cinematic Universe. While the MCU has explored the [[multiverse]] in projects like //Loki//, //Spider-Man: No Way Home//, and //Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness//, the specific, bleak future of Earth X remains exclusive to the comics. Adapting Earth X for the MCU would present significant challenges. * **Deep Lore Dependency:** The story's impact is rooted in decades of comic book history. Revelations about the Celestials' true purpose, the nature of mutants, and the ultimate fate of characters like [[captain_marvel_mar-vell|Mar-Vell]] rely on audience familiarity with established, often obscure, comic canon that differs greatly from the MCU's streamlined continuity. * **Scale and Tone:** The sheer scale of Earth X—mutating the entire global population and redefining cosmic entities—is immense. Its tone is also relentlessly dark and deconstructive, showing beloved heroes as aged, defeated, and deeply flawed, which might clash with the generally more optimistic and heroic tone of the MCU. * **Logistical Complexity:** Introducing a world where every single human has superpowers would fundamentally alter the MCU's established rules and require a narrative reset of monumental proportions, making it a difficult concept to integrate without dedicating an entire phase of storytelling to it. While a direct adaptation is unlikely, it's possible the MCU could borrow thematic elements, such as a future where heroes have aged or specific character designs from Alex Ross, for a "What If...?" episode or a brief multiversal cameo. ===== Part 3: The Earth X Saga: Timeline, Turning Points & Aftermath ===== The story of Earth-9997 unfolds across a trilogy of interconnected maxiseries, each escalating the stakes from planetary to universal to metaphysical. ==== Earth X (1999) ==== The inaugural series establishes the bleak status quo and the central mystery. The narrative is driven by two primary threads: the investigation of the world's mutations by a blinded Uatu and his herald, X-51 (Machine Man), and the ground-level struggle against the telepathic tyrant known as the Skull. * **Key Turning Points:** * **The Rise of the Skull:** The Skull is revealed to be a young, sociopathic version of the Red Skull who has discarded his predecessor's ideology for pure, nihilistic conquest. He amasses an army of mind-controlled followers and marches on New York. * **Captain America's Despair:** An aged [[captain_america|Steve Rogers]], disillusioned and world-weary, has abandoned his heroic identity. He is drawn back into the fight by the Skull's threat, but he is a broken man, representing the death of the old world's ideals. His journey to reclaim his purpose is a core emotional arc. * **Reed Richards' Guilt:** At the behest of a dying [[doctor_doom|Victor Von Doom]], [[mister_fantastic|Reed Richards]] dons Doom's armor and assumes leadership of Latveria. He becomes obsessed with reversing the Terrigenesis, viewing it as a problem to be solved, but discovers the horrifying truth: the mutations are an essential defense mechanism. * **The Celestial Revelation:** The climax reveals the planet's gravitational shifts are caused by a Celestial embryo growing within the Earth. The Celestials seeded the planet to birth a new member of their race. The powers granted to humanity are designed to protect the planet from external threats (like [[galactus]]) until the Celestial is born, at which point the Earth will be destroyed. Reversing the mutations would leave the planet defenseless. * **The Defeat of the Celestials:** Realizing Galactus (revealed to be the last survivor of a world destroyed by a Celestial birth) is the only one who can stop them, Reed Richards summons him. Black Bolt's voice, amplified by Lockjaw, cripples the arriving Celestials, and Galactus consumes the Celestial embryo, saving the Earth but leaving its future uncertain. ==== Universe X (2000) ==== //Universe X// expands the scope from Earth to the entire cosmos, focusing on the nature of death and the afterlife. A resurrected Captain Mar-Vell (Mar-Vell) begins a quest to build a "Paradise" in the Realm of the Dead, but his actions have unforeseen consequences. * **Key Turning Points:** * **Mar-Vell's Crusade:** The child Mar-Vell, an apparently reincarnated version of the original hero, begins systematically eliminating Death as a cosmic concept. He gathers souls in his expanding Paradise, believing he is saving them. However, this creates a universe where nothing can die, leading to horrific stagnation and undeath. * **The Realm of the Dead:** This afterlife is revealed to be a construct created by the heroes themselves, a shared reality for departed souls. Mar-Vell's war is against the very idea of an ending, which proves to be a necessary part of existence. * **The Asgardian Dilemma:** The [[asgardians|Asgardians]] of this reality are revealed to be shapeshifting aliens who were manipulated by the Celestials. They were tricked into believing they were gods and given their forms and stories by Loki, who now seeks to free them from this shared delusion. Their struggle for identity is a major subplot. * **The Fate of Thanos:** [[thanos]] becomes a key player, seeking the Ultimate Nullifier to end the unbearable "undeath" Mar-Vell has created. He becomes a reluctant anti-hero, understanding that Death is a vital cosmic function. * **The Birth of a New Paradise:** The series culminates in the realization that Mar-Vell's initial Paradise was flawed. A new Paradise is constructed not for all souls, but for every living person, a pocket dimension of wish fulfillment they can access, designed to bring happiness and purpose to a still-chaotic world. ==== Paradise X (2001-2003) ==== The final act of the trilogy, //Paradise X//, delves into the ultimate origins of the Marvel Universe and the final destiny of humanity. The threat shifts from the cosmic to the metaphysical as the heroes confront the First Fallen and the true nature of reality itself. * **Key Turning Points:** * **The Church of Immortus:** A new religion sweeps the globe, led by Jude, the Entropic Man. It preaches that mutants are a divine evolution and that Paradise is a lie, causing a schism between believers and those who embrace Mar-Vell's afterlife. This faction is manipulated by [[immortus|Immortus]] and [[mephisto]]. * **The Origin of Everything:** It is revealed that the original universe was composed of a primordial, anti-matter energy. The Celestials, seeking to expand their numbers, sealed this energy away, creating the positive-matter universe as a "bottle" for it. The entity known as Death is, in fact, the consciousness of this trapped anti-matter, seeking to reclaim existence. * **X-51, The New Watcher:** Aaron Stack fully embraces his role, becoming the new Watcher for Earth and a key force in protecting reality. * **Humanity's Ultimate Choice:** The heroes discover that humanity's destiny is to become a new race of cosmic beings, perfect equals to the Celestials, to act as stewards of the universe. To achieve this, every soul in the Realm of the Dead must be released to rejoin the living, making everyone a godlike being. * **The Final Paradise:** The saga concludes with this grand apotheosis. The dead are resurrected, humanity ascends, and Reed Richards and Uatu stand as guardians of a new reality, having guided their species from flawed mortals to the architects of the future. ===== Part 4: Key Characters & Factions of Earth-9997 ===== The cast of Earth X is a distorted mirror of the familiar Marvel Universe, with almost every character transformed by decades of hardship and mutation. ==== The Changed Heroes ==== * **Captain America (Steve Rogers):** An old, weathered man with a scarred "A" on his forehead. He is a shell of his former self, having given up hope after a confrontation with the Skull left him broken. He wields a shattered shield and a tattered flag, a symbol of a nation and an ideal that no longer exist. His journey is one of rediscovering his will to fight. * **Iron Man (Tony Stark):** A complete recluse, Stark has sealed himself and his few remaining allies inside a massive, self-sufficient "Stark Tower" fortress, protected by legions of [[iron_man_armor|Iron Man drones]]. He refuses to engage with the outside world, believing it's beyond saving, and dedicates his time to building a new Iron Avenger to protect humanity from the Celestials. * **The X-Men:** The dream is dead. [[cyclops|Scott Summers]], under the new codename "Mr. S," leads a new team of X-Men as a law enforcement agency. [[wolverine|Logan]] is overweight, bitter, and trapped in a loveless, alcoholic marriage with [[jean_grey|Jean Grey]], who has been mentally shut down by her overwhelming telepathic connection to a world of super-powered minds. * **Daredevil (Matt Murdock):** Now a death-defying circus performer, an "Immortal Man" who uses his powers to entertain. He has been killed dozens of times, only to be resurrected, and has become a celebrity for it. He is no longer a hero but an adrenaline junkie. * **The Hulk (Bruce Banner):** Banner and the Hulk have finally separated. The Hulk remains a primal, ape-like creature, while Banner has become a young boy, completely dependent on the Hulk for protection. They share a psychic link, representing a tormented child and his monstrous guardian. ==== The New Power Players ==== * **The Skull:** The primary antagonist of the first series. An incredibly powerful young telepath who can override the will of anyone he looks at. His true identity is a mystery for much of the story, but he is ultimately a force of pure chaos, seeking to bend the world to his will simply because he can. * **The Pope (Absorbing Man) & The Head of the Church (The Spiders-Man):** [[absorbing_man|Carl Creel]] and [[spider-man|Peter Parker]] become figureheads of a new religion. Creel's faith is manipulated by Loki, while Parker, deeply depressed and retired, is followed by a cult that sees him as a symbol of humanity's potential. * **The Avenging Host:** The souls of slain [[avengers]] residing in Mar-Vell's Paradise. They are angelic beings who fight on his behalf in the Realm of the Dead, believing they are creating a true utopia for all souls. ==== The Cosmic Observers ==== * **Uatu the Watcher:** No longer a passive observer. The Celestials blinded him for his role in creating Galactus. He is the central narrator of the series, imparting his cosmic knowledge to X-51 and, by extension, the reader. His character is transformed from a silent sentry to a tormented Cassandra, forced to watch a future he can no longer see but understands all too well. * **The Celestials:** Reimagined as cosmic farmers. They travel the universe, seeding planets with their embryos. They empower native species to act as a planetary immune system to protect the growing Celestial within. They are not malevolent, but their life cycle is inherently destructive to mortal life. * **Galactus (Franklin Richards):** In a stunning twist, it is revealed that Galactus, the Devourer of Worlds, is in fact an adult [[franklin_richards]] from a previous iteration of reality. After Reed Richards of Earth-9997 merges with the [[fantastic_four|Fantastic Four's]] unstable molecules, he becomes a new kind of Vibranium, which is used to empower Franklin to become the new Galactus, a being that now restores worlds instead of consuming them.((This is a slight oversimplification of a very complex plot point involving the Yancy Street Gang and other elements, but captures the essence of the final transformation.)) ===== Part 5: Core Themes and Revelations ===== //Earth X// is more than a superhero story; it's a sprawling work of philosophical and theological science fiction that uses the Marvel canon as its mythology. ==== The Redefinition of "Hero" ==== The series fundamentally questions what it means to be a hero in a world where everyone is super. If everyone has powers, are the Avengers still special? The story argues that true heroism isn't about power, but about choice, sacrifice, and the will to do good even when hope is lost. Captain America's journey is the ultimate embodiment of this theme. He is physically weak and emotionally broken, but he becomes a hero again not by regaining his youth, but by choosing to stand against tyranny one last time. ==== The Celestial Seed: The Truth of Superpowers ==== Perhaps the saga's most enduring legacy is its unified field theory of Marvel superpowers. The revelation that the Celestials implanted an egg in the Earth and that all superpowers—mutant, Inhuman, mutate, etc.—are expressions of this cosmic DNA provides a single, elegant explanation for decades of disparate origins. It reframes humanity's entire existence as part of a cosmic plan. This idea posits that heroes aren't accidents; they are antibodies, evolved to protect the planet long enough for the Celestial to be born. This is a terrifying and awe-inspiring concept that changes the context of every Marvel story that came before it. ==== The Nature of Death and the Afterlife ==== //Universe X// and //Paradise X// deeply explore the metaphysics of the Marvel Universe. The Realm of the Dead is not a divine plane, but a psychic construct built from the beliefs and memories of the living. Mar-Vell's war on Death is portrayed as a tragic mistake born of good intentions. He seeks to end suffering but instead removes meaning and consequence from life. The story ultimately argues that death is necessary, that endings give life purpose, and that true paradise is not the absence of struggle, but the ability to find peace and fulfillment within it. ===== Part 6: Legacy and Influence ===== The //Earth X// trilogy, while a self-contained Elseworlds-style story, has had a lasting impact on the Marvel landscape and the comic book medium. * **The "Dark Future" Trope:** Alongside DC's //Kingdom Come//, //Earth X// helped popularize the "dark future" narrative where beloved heroes are aged, broken, and forced into one last battle. This trope has been echoed in many subsequent stories, most notably //Old Man Logan//, which shares a similar vision of a dystopian America ruled by villains. * **Conceptual Influence:** The central idea of the Celestials seeding Earth to birth one of their own was later echoed in the mainstream Earth-616 continuity and became a central plot point in the 2021 MCU film, //Eternals//. While the execution differs, the core concept owes a significant debt to the groundwork laid by Ross and Krueger. * **Artistic Landmark:** Alex Ross's character redesigns have become iconic. The image of an aged, flag-draped Captain America, a corpulent Wolverine, or a spectral Thor are instantly recognizable. These designs often appear as variant costumes in video games like //Marvel's Spider-Man// and //Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3//, cementing their place in the visual lexicon of Marvel. * **Prequels and Sequels:** The world of Earth-9997 was revisited in 2020 with the prequel series //Marvels X//, written by Jim Krueger with art by Well-Bee. This series explored the saga's inciting incident—the release of the Terrigen Mists—from the perspective of an ordinary boy named David, providing a street-level view of the world's descent into super-powered chaos. ===== See Also ===== * [[alex_ross]] * [[celestials]] * [[inhumans]] * [[terrrigen_mists]] * [[uatu_the_watcher]] * [[kingdom_come_dc_comics|Kingdom Come (DC Comics)]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The series is famous for its dense text pages in the back of each issue, written from the perspective of X-51's interviews with a blinded Uatu, which provide the bulk of the universe's secret history.)) ((John Paul Leon's art style was intentionally chosen to be a stark contrast to Alex Ross's painted realism, grounding the futuristic story in a gritty, noir-ish aesthetic.)) ((The design for The Skull was based on a child Alex Ross saw at a mall who was giving him a dirty look, which Ross found unsettling.)) ((The concept of Thor being a woman in this reality was a major surprise. It was revealed that Loki had tricked Odin into turning Thor into a woman to teach him humility, but Thor came to prefer this form.)) ((Many character fates are tragic inversions of their 616 counterparts. For example, the Fantastic Four's cosmic ray accident is what ultimately saves them and the world, as their unstable molecular structure allows them to become the Vibranium needed to forge a new Galactus.)) ((//Earth X// was originally published as issue #s 0-12 and a final issue labeled "X".)) ((The character of X-51, Machine Man, was chosen as the point-of-view character because, as an android, he was an outsider to the human condition and could observe the changes to humanity with a unique, detached perspective.))