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. ====== The Infinity Gauntlet ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **The Infinity Gauntlet is a cosmic artifact of nigh-unlimited power, designed to channel the collective energy of the six Infinity Gems (or Stones), granting its wielder virtual omnipotence and control over the fundamental forces of existence.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** It is the ultimate weapon and tool in the Marvel Universe, a device that transforms its user into a godlike being capable of altering reality on a universal, and sometimes multiversal, scale. Its existence is a constant source of cosmic-level conflict, sought by beings like [[thanos|Thanos]] for conquest and by heroes like [[adam_warlock|Adam Warlock]] for protection. * **Primary Impact:** The Gauntlet's most infamous use resulted in the "Snap," an act where its wielder erased half of all life in the universe with a simple thought. This singular event, both in the comics' //[[the_infinity_gauntlet_saga|The Infinity Gauntlet]]// saga and the MCU's //[[avengers_infinity_war|Avengers: Infinity War]]//, represents one of the most catastrophic and defining moments in Marvel history, with repercussions that spanned years and multiple storylines. * **Key Incarnations:** The primary distinction lies in its origin and limitations. In the [[earth_616|Earth-616]] comics, the Gauntlet is merely a focusing device—a simple glove—with the Infinity Gems themselves containing all the power. In the [[marvel_cinematic_universe|Marvel Cinematic Universe]], the Gauntlet is a masterfully forged Uru metal device, explicitly required to safely handle the immense energy of the Infinity Stones, and its use inflicts a severe, often lethal, physical toll on its wielder. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The Infinity Gauntlet made its official debut as a completed artifact in **''The Infinity Gauntlet'' #1**, published in July 1991. However, the conceptual groundwork for this cosmic artifact was laid much earlier. The components, originally called the "Soul Gems," were introduced individually throughout the 1970s by various writers. It was writer and artist **[[jim_starlin|Jim Starlin]]** who became the primary architect of their mythology. Starlin's cosmic sagas, particularly in ''Captain Marvel'' and ''Warlock'', elevated Thanos of Titan from a powerful villain to a universe-threatening nihilist. In the 1990 two-issue limited series **''The Thanos Quest''**, Starlin retroactively unified the six gems, renaming them the "Infinity Gems," and chronicled Thanos's epic journey to wrest them from the clutches of the Elders of the Universe. This series served as the direct prelude to the main event and established the Gauntlet itself—a simple glove on which Thanos mounted his prizes. The subsequent six-issue miniseries, //The Infinity Gauntlet//, penned by Starlin with art by George Pérez and Ron Lim, became a landmark event in comic book history. It was a blockbuster on an unprecedented scale, uniting nearly every major Marvel hero against a single, omnipotent threat. The story's success cemented the Infinity Gauntlet's place as the most powerful object in the Marvel Universe and defined Thanos for a generation. Its themes of absolute power, mortality, and hubris have influenced countless stories since and served as the direct inspiration for the overarching narrative of the MCU's first three phases, known as "The Infinity Saga." ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of the Gauntlet and its constituent gems differs significantly between the prime comic universe and the cinematic universe, reflecting their distinct cosmologies and narrative needs. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === In the Earth-616 continuity, the origin of the Infinity Gems is tied to the very creation of the universe itself. According to cosmic lore, before the current reality existed, there was a singular, omnipotent, and lonely cosmic entity known as **Nemesis**. In an attempt to end its solitude, Nemesis created life, but these beings lacked a concept of good or evil and ultimately destroyed themselves. In its grief and madness, Nemesis committed cosmic suicide. However, its immense power could not be truly destroyed. The entity's consciousness was shattered and reformed into the seven Infinity Gems((Originally there were seven gems, with the seventh being the Ego Gem, which contained the consciousness of Nemesis. This was later retconned, and the Ego Gem was separated from the core six, rarely appearing in subsequent stories.)). Each of the core six gems came to embody a fundamental aspect of the newly formed reality: Space, Mind, Soul, Reality, Power, and Time. For eons, these gems, objects of unimaginable power, were scattered across the universe. They were sentient to varying degrees, particularly the malevolent Soul Gem, which contained a pocket dimension and had a hunger for souls. The Gauntlet itself is, in this continuity, of almost no importance. It is merely a left-handed glove that Thanos wore, a simple vessel upon which to mount the six gems so they could be used in unison. The glove itself possesses no inherent power and is not made of any special material. The true power lies entirely within the synergy of the gems working together. Thanos's genius was not in forging a mighty weapon, but in conceiving the idea of combining the gems and having the will to hunt them down, assembling them into the universe's ultimate tool of destruction to court his love, the cosmic embodiment of [[mistress_death|Mistress Death]]. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The origin story in the MCU (designated as Earth-199999) is more streamlined and focuses on cosmic creation and masterful craftsmanship. As explained by the Collector in //Guardians of the Galaxy//, the six Infinity Stones were remnants of six singularities that existed before the Big Bang. When the universe was created, these singularities were compressed and forged into concentrated ingots—the Infinity Stones. Each stone governs a fundamental aspect of existence, mirroring their comic book counterparts: Space (the Tesseract), Reality (the Aether), Power (the Orb), Mind (Loki's Scepter), Time (the Eye of Agamotto), and Soul (on Vormir). Unlike in the comics, the raw power of the Stones is too great for most mortal beings to handle directly. Wielding even one can be fatal, as seen with the Power Stone incinerating those who touch it. Therefore, a vessel is required to channel their energy safely. Recognizing this, Thanos the Mad Titan traveled to the star-forged heart of **[[nidavellir]]**, home of the Dwarves, the master weaponsmiths of the Nine Realms. He forced the dwarf king, **[[eitri|Eitri]]**, and his people to design and forge a device capable of housing all six Stones: the Infinity Gauntlet. Forged from the nigh-indestructible Uru metal, the Gauntlet was designed not only to hold the Stones but also to allow a wielder to tap into and utilize their combined power. After its creation, Thanos, to prevent any other such weapon from being made, slaughtered all the dwarves save for Eitri, whom he left alive after encasing his hands in metal. This act of cruel pragmatism ensured that his Infinity Gauntlet was unique, a weapon of ultimate power that only he possessed, which he intended to use to bring "balance" to the universe by wiping out half of all life. ===== Part 3: Composition, Powers & Wielders ===== The function, composition, and effects of the Infinity Gauntlet vary dramatically between its comic and cinematic appearances. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === ==== Composition and Mechanics ==== As previously noted, the physical Gauntlet in the comics is functionally mundane. It is a simple piece of armor, a left-handed glove, which serves only as a mounting rack for the six Infinity Gems. There is no indication it is made of Uru or any other special material. The power comes from the gems, and their combined might is focused by the will of the user. Beings of immense psychic fortitude or cosmic stature can wield the Gauntlet with no apparent physical strain. Thanos, Adam Warlock, and Captain America have all used it without immediate physical harm, though the mental and spiritual toll can be immense. ==== Powers of the Infinity Gems ==== When united on the Gauntlet, the six gems create a synergistic circuit, granting the user total mastery over reality. While their combined power is effectively infinite, each gem governs a specific domain: * **The Power Gem:** Controls all forms of power and energy in the universe. It can augment physical strength to limitless levels, manipulate all energy, and boost the effects of the other five gems. By itself, it grants its user access to an infinite power source. * **The Space Gem:** Allows the user to exist in any location, or all locations, simultaneously. It grants mastery over space, enabling instantaneous teleportation (of oneself, others, or entire planets), dimensional travel, and the ability to warp or re-order space at will. * **The Time Gem:** Grants the user total control over the past, present, and future. It allows for time travel, the ability to stop, slow down, or speed up the flow of time, and to trap individuals or entire universes in endless time loops. It also provides visions of possible futures. * **The Mind Gem:** Taps into the collective consciousness of the entire universe. It grants limitless psionic, psychic, and telepathic abilities, allowing the user to read, control, and alter any mind in existence simultaneously. It is the gateway to the subconscious of all living things. * **The Soul Gem:** The most dangerous and sentient of the gems. It allows the user to manipulate the souls of the living and the dead. It can steal, alter, or trap souls within its own pocket reality (the Soulworld). It can also revert beings to their natural state and attack an opponent's spiritual essence. * **The Reality Gem:** The most powerful and difficult gem to control. It allows the user to bend the laws of reality and physics to their will, making the impossible possible. It can create any type of alternate reality the user wishes. Wielded without the other gems to provide stability, its effects are often temporary. ==== Notable Wielders ==== * **Thanos:** The most famous wielder, who used it to erase half the universe to appease Mistress Death. * **Nebula:** A horribly maimed Nebula briefly seized the Gauntlet from Thanos, using it to undo his atrocities and then attempting to seize control of the universe herself before being tricked out of it. * **Adam Warlock:** After defeating Nebula, Warlock took the Gauntlet and became a "god" of pure logic, but was forced to give it up by the Living Tribunal, who decreed the gems should never be used in unison again. * **The Illuminati:** A secret group of Earth's heroes ([[iron_man|Iron Man]], [[mr_fantastic|Mr. Fantastic]], [[doctor_strange|Doctor Strange]], [[professor_x|Professor X]], [[black_bolt|Black Bolt]], and [[namor|Namor]]). They secretly gathered the gems and each member guarded one. * **Captain America (Steve Rogers):** Wielded the Gauntlet with all six gems to push away an encroaching universe during an Incursion. The act shattered all but the Time Gem, which vanished. * **Doctor Doom:** During the 2015 //Secret Wars// event, he used the power of multiple Gauntlets gathered from doomed realities to challenge the Beyonders. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === ==== Composition and Mechanics ==== In the MCU, the Gauntlet is as crucial as the Stones it houses. Two primary Gauntlets have been depicted: * **The Infinity Gauntlet (Left-Handed):** Forged by Eitri on Nidavellir from Uru metal. It was specifically designed to harness the overwhelming power of the six Stones. The Gauntlet allows a user to access the power of the Stones, but the raw energy feedback, described as "gamma radiation," is immense. Only beings of incredible power, like Thanos or the Hulk, can survive using its full power, and even they suffer grievous injury. * **The Nano Gauntlet (Right-Handed):** Designed and built by Tony Stark, Bruce Banner, and Rocket Raccoon using nanotechnology. This gauntlet was created to house the Stones after they were retrieved via the "Time Heist." It is more adaptable than the Uru Gauntlet, able to resize itself to fit any user. However, it is also subject to the same devastating energy feedback. ==== Powers of the Infinity Stones ==== The MCU Stones function similarly to their comic counterparts, though their powers are often depicted more visually and with more immediate, direct applications. * **The Space Stone (Blue - The Tesseract):** Primarily used for opening portals across vast distances in space. Powers the Tesseract. * **The Mind Stone (Yellow - Scepter/Vision's Forehead):** Grants enhanced intelligence, telepathy, and the ability to control minds. It also gave sentience to both Ultron and Vision. * **The Reality Stone (Red - The Aether):** A fluid, parasitic substance that can convert matter and create complex, localized illusions, bending the laws of physics on a smaller scale than its comic version. * **The Power Stone (Purple - The Orb):** A source of immense destructive energy. It enhances the user's strength and can unleash devastating energy blasts capable of destroying entire planets. * **The Time Stone (Green - The Eye of Agamotto):** Allows for precise control over time, including creating time loops, reversing time locally, and looking into future possibilities. * **The Soul Stone (Orange - Vormir):** The most enigmatic stone. It has a degree of sentience and can only be obtained through the sacrifice of a loved one ("a soul for a soul"). Its specific powers are the least defined but are implied to involve control over life and death. ==== Notable Wielders ==== * **Thanos:** Used the Uru Gauntlet to successfully wipe out half of all universal life ("The Snap") and later used the Stones to destroy the Stones themselves. * **Hulk (Bruce Banner):** Wielded the Nano Gauntlet to reverse Thanos's snap, bringing back everyone who had been erased five years prior ("The Blip"). The effort permanently crippled his right arm. * **Iron Man (Tony Stark):** In the final battle against Thanos, Stark used his nanotechnology to transfer the Stones from the Uru Gauntlet to his own suit, forming a makeshift Nano Gauntlet. He then used their power to snap his fingers and erase Thanos and his entire army, sacrificing his own life in the process due to the immense energy output. ===== Part 4: Key Figures & Factions ===== While an inanimate object, the Gauntlet's existence has defined the motivations and conflicts of numerous powerful figures and groups across the cosmos. ==== Primary Seekers ==== * **Thanos:** In both continuities, Thanos is the Gauntlet's most infamous seeker. In the comics, his motivation is philosophical and romantic; he seeks to impress the abstract entity Mistress Death by extinguishing life. In the MCU, his motivation is presented as a misguided, utilitarian crusade; he believes the universe is overpopulated and that eliminating half of all life is a necessary act of mercy to prevent widespread suffering. The Gauntlet is the only tool efficient enough for this task. * **Adam Warlock:** Warlock is the cosmic counterbalance to Thanos in the comics. His history is intrinsically tied to the Soul Gem. He seeks control of the Gauntlet not for conquest, but to safeguard reality from those who would abuse its power, including Thanos and Warlock's own evil future self, the Magus. He is the universe's designated protector of the artifact. ==== Key Opponents ==== * **The Avengers & Earth's Heroes:** In both universes, Earth's heroes represent the frontline of opposition to the Gauntlet's misuse. While vastly outmatched, their defining trait is their refusal to yield, even to an omnipotent foe. Their battles against Thanos are not just for survival, but for the fundamental right of the universe to exist free from the whims of a single, all-powerful being. * **The Cosmic Entities:** In the comics, the Gauntlet's power is so immense that it draws the attention of the universe's most powerful abstract beings, such as **[[eternity|Eternity]]**, **Galactus**, and the **Living Tribunal**. Their battle against Thanos demonstrated the scale of the Gauntlet's power, as Thanos was able to defeat them all with ease. The Living Tribunal ultimately served as the final arbiter, decreeing that the Gauntlet's power was too great for any single being to wield. ==== Guardians & Custodians ==== * **The Infinity Watch (Earth-616):** After Adam Warlock was forced to relinquish the Gauntlet, he was tasked with safeguarding the individual Infinity Gems. He formed the Infinity Watch, entrusting one gem to each member: Gamora (Time), Drax the Destroyer (Power), Moondragon (Mind), Pip the Troll (Space), and kept the Soul Gem for himself. Thanos was surprisingly given the Reality Gem to guard in secret. * **The Illuminati (Earth-616):** After the Infinity Watch disbanded, Mr. Fantastic secretly re-collected the gems. He formed the Illuminati, a clandestine group of the world's most intelligent and influential heroes, to secretly control and protect the world. They attempted to use the Gauntlet to wish the gems out of existence, but failed. They then divided the gems amongst themselves for safekeeping, a decision that would later lead to immense conflict and tragedy when they used the Gauntlet to fight the Incursions. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== === The Thanos Quest (1990) === This two-issue prelude to the main event is a masterclass in cosmic storytelling. The newly resurrected Thanos, seeking to win the affection of Mistress Death, decides that wiping out half the universe is the grandest romantic gesture. To do so, he systematically hunts down the Elders of the Universe—ancient beings who each possess one of the Infinity Gems. Through cunning, manipulation, and overwhelming force, Thanos outwits and defeats the Champion, the Gardener, the Collector, the Runner, and the Grandmaster, claiming their gems. The series establishes the immense power of each individual gem and showcases Thanos's intellect and ruthlessness, setting the stage for his apotheosis. === The Infinity Gauntlet (1991) === The quintessential Infinity Gauntlet story. With all six gems assembled, Thanos ascends to godhood. He casually erects a massive shrine to Death and, with a literal snap of his fingers, erases half of all living beings in the universe. Earth's remaining heroes, led by a desperate Captain America and Adam Warlock, launch a near-suicidal assault on Thanos's floating fortress. The battle is a massacre, with heroes being killed in horrific and imaginative ways. The conflict escalates until the cosmic entities of the universe itself arrive to challenge Thanos, who defeats them all and even usurps the place of Eternity as the abstract embodiment of reality. In a moment of cosmic carelessness, Thanos separates his consciousness from his body, allowing his "granddaughter," Nebula, to steal the Gauntlet. Warlock ultimately wrests it from the unstable Nebula, undoes all the death and destruction, and becomes the new guardian of the universe's ultimate power. === New Avengers & The Incursions (2013-2015) === During Jonathan Hickman's epic run on //Avengers// and //New Avengers//, the Gauntlet is reintroduced with a dire purpose. The Marvel Multiverse begins to suffer from "Incursions"—events where two parallel Earths collide, destroying both of their respective universes unless one of the Earths is destroyed first. The Illuminati reassemble the Infinity Gauntlet in a desperate attempt to use its power to simply push the other Earth away. Captain America wields the fully-powered Gauntlet and succeeds, but the strain is too great. Five of the six Infinity Gems shatter into dust, and the Time Gem vanishes. The destruction of the gems from their universe leaves Earth-616 defenseless against future Incursions, directly leading to the events of //Time Runs Out// and the multiversal collapse in //Secret Wars//. === Avengers: Infinity War & Avengers: Endgame (MCU, 2018-2019) === This two-part cinematic event served as the culmination of the MCU's Infinity Saga. //Infinity War// chronicles Thanos's final, brutal quest to acquire the six Infinity Stones, culminating in his victory on Wakanda where he completes the Gauntlet and performs the Snap, wiping out half of all life, including many of the Avengers. //Endgame// picks up five years later, with the survivors in a broken world. Their last hope lies in a "Time Heist"—traveling to different points in the past to borrow the Infinity Stones before Thanos acquired them. They succeed and build the Nano Gauntlet. The Hulk uses it to reverse the Snap, bringing everyone back. This act draws a past version of Thanos to the present, leading to a final, cataclysmic battle for the fate of the universe, which ends with Tony Stark making the ultimate sacrifice, using the Stones to erase Thanos and his army from existence. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610):** In this reality, the Infinity Gauntlet is actually two separate gauntlets, one for each hand, required to contain the power of the eight Infinity Gems found in this universe. The additional gems were discovered on the left and right sides of the Gauntlet. When the Ultimates fought their version of Thanos, it was revealed that the Gauntlets were not just containers but also a key part of a universal "lock." * **Secret Wars (2015):** In the lead-up to the final Incursion, Doctor Doom, Doctor Strange, and the Molecule Man confront the godlike Beyonders. While Strange is killed, Doom manages to harness their power. On Battleworld, the patchwork planet he creates from the remnants of the multiverse, his "Thor Corps" police force wields hammers, but the ultimate power is the God Emperor Doom himself. A version of the Infinity Gauntlet is kept in his museum, belonging to the now-dead Earth-616 Thanos. Black Panther from the 616-remnant eventually finds and uses this Gauntlet to battle Doom in the final confrontation. * **//What If...?// (MCU Series, Earth-838):** In the animated series, one timeline shows a variant of Ultron successfully uploading his consciousness into Vision's body, acquiring the Mind Stone. He proceeds to kill Thanos, take the remaining five Infinity Stones, and build a new suit of armor integrated with the Gauntlet's power. "Infinity Ultron" becomes a multiversal threat, capable of perceiving and traveling to other realities, forcing The Watcher to assemble the Guardians of the Multiverse to stop him. * **Fortnite x Marvel: Zero War (Comic, 2022):** In this canonical crossover comic series, it is revealed that the Zero Point, the central energy source of the Fortnite island's reality, is in fact a "seventh" Infinity Stone. It is the stone of creation and the nexus of all realities, making it arguably the most powerful of all. ===== See Also ===== * [[thanos]] * [[adam_warlock]] * [[infinity_gems]] * [[the_infinity_gauntlet_saga]] * [[avengers_infinity_war]] * [[avengers_endgame]] * [[the_living_tribunal]] * [[eitri]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The original "Soul Gems" from the 1970s had different colors than the ones standardized later. The Soul Gem was green, the Power Gem was red, etc. The colors were later retconned in the comics to match the popular color scheme established by the Marvel Cinematic Universe.)) ((In the comics, the Infinity Gauntlet is consistently a left-handed glove. In the MCU, the Uru Gauntlet forged by Eitri is also left-handed. The Stark Nano Gauntlet, however, is right-handed, creating a visual parallel between the two primary wielders.)) ((While the MCU's Gauntlet causes severe physical damage to its user, this is not a consistent rule in the comics. High-tier cosmic beings like Thanos wield it with no issue. Mortals like Captain America have used it, but the strain that shatters the gems is from the cosmic force he is pushing back against, not a biological feedback loop from the Gauntlet itself.)) ((The first appearance of a gauntlet that resembled the Infinity Gauntlet was in //Iron Man// #55 (1973), the same issue that introduced Thanos. Thanos is seen wearing a glove with several gems on it, but this predates the concept of the unified Infinity Gems.)) ((Source material for the core comic storylines includes: //The Thanos Quest// #1-2, //The Infinity Gauntlet// #1-6, //New Avengers// (Vol. 3) #1-3, and //Secret Wars// (2015) #1-9.)) ((In an interview, Jim Starlin stated he was inspired by the 1960s television series //The Wild Wild West//, where the villain of one episode wore a glove with built-in devices, which sparked the initial visual idea for a power-laden gauntlet.))