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. ====== Infinity War (Comics) ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **A 1992 Marvel Comics crossover event, and the sequel to //The Infinity Gauntlet//, in which Adam Warlock's evil half, the Magus, returns to wage war on the universe by unleashing evil doppelgangers of Earth's heroes to seize the Infinity Gauntlet for himself.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** //The Infinity War// serves as the dark, psychological middle chapter in Jim Starlin's original "Infinity Trilogy," exploring themes of identity, corruption, and the inherent dangers of omnipotence. It firmly establishes [[magus_(marvel_comics)|Magus]] as a cosmic-level threat distinct from [[thanos|Thanos]] and sets the stage for its sequel, [[infinity_crusade|The Infinity Crusade]]. * **Primary Impact:** The event's most enduring legacy is the introduction of the hero doppelgangers, twisted mirror images that forced Marvel's heroes to literally confront their inner darkness. It also redefined the relationship between Adam Warlock and Thanos, casting the Mad Titan in the uncharacteristic role of a strategic anti-hero fighting to preserve reality. * **Key Incarnations:** It is critically important to understand that the comic storyline of //The Infinity War// has **almost no plot elements in common** with the 2018 film //Avengers: Infinity War//. The comic is about Magus and his doppelgangers, whereas the MCU film is a direct adaptation of the preceding comic event, [[infinity_gauntlet_(comics)|The Infinity Gauntlet]], supplemented with elements from Jonathan Hickman's 2013 //Infinity// event. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== //The Infinity War// was a six-issue limited series published by Marvel Comics from June to November 1992. It was the centerpiece of a massive crossover event that sprawled across numerous Marvel titles, including //Alpha Flight//, //Captain America//, //Daredevil//, //Doctor Strange, Sorcerer Supreme//, //Fantastic Four//, //Guardians of the Galaxy//, //Marc Spector: Moon Knight//, //Quasar//, //Silver Surfer//, //Spider-Man//, //Warlock and the Infinity Watch//, and //Wonder Man//. Capitalizing on the monumental success of 1991's [[infinity_gauntlet_(comics)|The Infinity Gauntlet]], Marvel reunited the same creative team: writer [[jim_starlin|Jim Starlin]], penciler [[ron_lim|Ron Lim]], and inker Al Milgrom. Starlin, Marvel's premier cosmic storyteller, used this event to continue his exploration of Adam Warlock, a character he had significantly shaped in the 1970s. Ron Lim's dynamic, clean art style had become synonymous with Marvel's cosmic events of the era, defining the visual landscape for a generation of readers. The series was a commercial juggernaut, famous for its holographic foil covers on the first issue, a popular marketing gimmick of the 1990s comics boom. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The premise of //The Infinity War// is a direct consequence of the finale of //The Infinity Gauntlet//. It is a story born from the internal schism of its protagonist, Adam Warlock, and the cosmic fallout of wielding ultimate power. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) - The Premise === After defeating Nebula and claiming the Infinity Gauntlet from Thanos, [[adam_warlock|Adam Warlock]] ascended to a state of near-omnipotence, becoming the effective god of the Earth-616 reality. However, the cosmic abstract [[living_tribunal|The Living Tribunal]] intervened, judging that no single being, regardless of their intentions, should wield such absolute power. Warlock was forced to relinquish his divinity and divide the Infinity Gems among guardians of his choosing, forming the [[infinity_watch|Infinity Watch]]. To prove his worthiness and logic to the Living Tribunal, Warlock had taken a drastic step: he used the Gauntlet to purge himself of all emotion, expelling both "good" and "evil" from his being to become a creature of pure logic. This act had unforeseen and catastrophic consequences. The expelled "evil" coalesced into a separate, sentient being: the Magus, Warlock's malevolent future self from a classic 1970s storyline, now reborn. Similarly, his "good" side would later emerge as the fanatical zealot known as [[the_goddess|The Goddess]]. The newly reborn Magus, a nihilistic and megalomaniacal being of immense power and cunning, immediately set his sights on a singular goal: to reacquire the Infinity Gauntlet and reshape the universe into a twisted panorama of his own evil design. From his base in a dimension between life and death, he began gathering power and formulating a brilliant, multi-layered strategy to defeat Earth's heroes and their cosmic allies. His opening salvo was the creation of an army of monstrous doppelgangers of Marvel's heroes, designed to sow chaos, confusion, and distrust, serving as the perfect distraction for his true cosmic chess moves. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) - The Adaptation Confusion === This is one of the most significant points of divergence between Marvel Comics and the MCU, and a common source of confusion for fans. The 2018 blockbuster film **//Avengers: Infinity War// is not an adaptation of the //Infinity War// comic book series.** The film's plot, which centers on Thanos systematically collecting the Infinity Stones to erase half of all life in the universe, is a direct and faithful adaptation of the **1991 //Infinity Gauntlet// comic series**. The title was likely chosen for brand recognition and to signify the scale of the conflict, but the story it tells is that of the preceding event. Furthermore, the MCU film incorporates several key elements from a completely different comic event: Jonathan Hickman's 2013 //Infinity// series. These elements include: * **The Black Order:** Thanos's lieutenants (named the Cull Obsidian in the MCU) such as Corvus Glaive, Proxima Midnight, Ebony Maw, and Cull Obsidian (Black Dwarf in the comics) are primary antagonists in Hickman's //Infinity//. They were not part of the original //Infinity Gauntlet// or //Infinity War// comic storylines. * **The Invasion of Earth:** The plot point of Thanos's armies launching a full-scale invasion of Earth (specifically the attack on Wakanda) while Thanos personally confronts other heroes is a core pillar of the //Infinity// comic, not //The Infinity Gauntlet// or //Infinity War//. The decision by Marvel Studios to bypass the Magus/doppelganger plot of the //Infinity War// comic was likely driven by several factors. First, it streamlined the narrative to focus squarely on Thanos, who had been built up as the MCU's ultimate villain for a decade. Introducing a complex new cosmic antagonist like the Magus, who is intrinsically tied to Adam Warlock (a character only teased at the end of //Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2//), would have muddied the climactic confrontation. Second, the doppelganger plot, while visually interesting, could be seen as a less personal and emotionally resonant threat than Thanos's universe-altering crusade. ===== Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath ===== //The Infinity War// unfolds as a grand cosmic thriller, a chess match between Adam Warlock, Thanos, and the Magus with the fate of reality at stake. === The Prelude: Road to War === The story begins months after the Infinity Gauntlet affair. The newly formed Infinity Watch—Adam Warlock (Soul Gem), [[gamora|Gamora]] (Time Gem), [[drax_the_destroyer|Drax the Destroyer]] (Power Gem), [[pip_the_troll|Pip the Troll]] (Space Gem), and [[moondragon|Moondragon]] (Mind Gem)—establishes a base on Monster Isle. Unbeknownst to most, Warlock had entrusted the final gem, the Reality Gem, to a secret sixth guardian: Thanos himself, whom Warlock correctly deduced would be the last person anyone would suspect of holding it and the one being who understood its terrible power enough to protect it. Meanwhile, the Magus makes his first moves. He dispatches several doppelgangers to Earth, beginning with a twisted version of Daredevil. This initial assault alerts Earth's heroes, but they misinterpret it as a minor, isolated threat. Concurrently, Thanos, residing in exile on his farm, begins an investigation into a series of cosmic energy disturbances. His quest leads him to the dimension of the dead, where he has a cryptic encounter with the entity Death, who warns him of a looming schism in reality itself. This sets Thanos on a path that will inevitably lead him into an uneasy alliance with his old enemies. === The Main Conflict: Doppelgangers and Cosmic Chess === The war escalates rapidly across multiple fronts. * **Phase 1: The Invasion of Earth:** Magus unleashes his doppelganger army //en masse//. A tidal wave of monstrous, dark reflections of heroes and villains alike descends upon New York City from a giant portal in the sky. Key battles erupt across the city: the Fantastic Four fight a grotesque, multi-limbed version of Mister Fantastic; Spider-Man faces a six-armed, fanged version of himself; and Captain America rallies the Avengers against a horde of twisted copies. The doppelgangers possess the powers and skills of the originals but are driven by pure malice, causing immense chaos and proving difficult for the heroes to fight, both physically and psychologically. * **Phase 2: The Heroes Rally and the Cosmic Response:** Earth's heroes, led by [[captain_america|Captain America]] and the remaining members of the [[fantastic_four|Fantastic Four]], establish a command center at Four Freedoms Plaza. As they struggle to contain the invasion, cosmic heroes like the [[silver_surfer|Silver Surfer]] and [[quasar|Quasar]] engage Magus's forces in space. Doctor Strange and [[doctor_doom|Doctor Doom]] independently sense the immense magical and cosmic power at play, realizing this is far more than a simple invasion. Doom, ever the opportunist, sees a chance to seize this power for himself. * **Phase 3: Magus's Trap is Sprung:** The doppelganger attack is revealed to be a brilliant feint. Magus's true goal was to draw out the Infinity Watch. He manipulates events, leading Adam Warlock and his guardians to his fortress at the center of his dimension. There, he springs his trap, overpowering and capturing Warlock and stripping the Infinity Gauntlet from him. In a moment of apparent triumph, Magus places the Gauntlet on his own hand, ready to claim omnipotence. * **Phase 4: The Ultimate Gambit & The Twist:** As Magus attempts to use the Gauntlet, nothing happens. He is enraged to discover that the Reality Gem on the Gauntlet is a powerless fake. In a shocking reveal, Thanos arrives with the real Reality Gem. He explains that he and Warlock had anticipated Magus's plan. Furthermore, a failsafe had been enacted after the first Gauntlet crisis: the Living Tribunal, with the silent agreement of the cosmic entity [[eternity|Eternity]], had decreed that the Infinity Gems could no longer be used in unison, rendering the complete Gauntlet inert. Magus's primary plan is foiled. * **Phase 5: The Final Battle:** Robbed of the Gauntlet, the furious Magus reveals his backup plan. He had already captured Eternity, the sentient embodiment of the universe, and used his own power to place the entity in a catatonic state. This allows Magus to access and wield Eternity's near-limitless cosmic power directly, making him a god-like being even without the Gems. A desperate final battle erupts. The combined might of Earth's heroes, the Infinity Watch, and cosmic beings like Galactus and Kronos assault the empowered Magus. Doctor Doom and Kang the Conqueror both arrive, attempting to siphon Magus's power for their own ends. The conflict reaches its peak when Magus prepares to merge his consciousness with Eternity, which would give him permanent control over all of reality. === The Aftermath and Legacy === The conclusion of the war hinges on the very artifact Magus sought. * **Magus's Defeat:** At the critical moment, Warlock, holding both the real and fake Reality Gems, opens a channel to the Soul Gem on his brow. The conflicting reality signals confuse the Gauntlet on Magus's hand. This momentary distraction is all that is needed. Adam Warlock and the Magus are two halves of the same soul, and Warlock exploits this connection to absorb the Magus back into the Soul Gem, imprisoning him within the Gem's internal "Soul World." Thanos then uses the Gauntlet—still powerless in unison but with the Gems usable individually—to restore Eternity and undo the immediate damage. * **Consequences:** With Magus defeated, the doppelgangers dissolve, and reality is stabilized. Thanos, having saved the universe, is praised by Warlock as a hero, a notion the Mad Titan finds repulsive before departing. The Infinity Watch remains intact, but Warlock is deeply troubled, aware that his "good" side, The Goddess, is still at large. This directly sets the stage for the final chapter of the trilogy, 1993's //The Infinity Crusade//. * **Legacy:** //The Infinity War// is a crucial, if sometimes overlooked, cosmic epic. It deepened the lore of the Infinity Gems, solidified the complex, philosophical frenemy dynamic between Warlock and Thanos, and showcased the sheer scale of cosmic threats beyond just a quest for artifacts. It remains a definitive example of 1990s event storytelling, weaving dozens of characters and titles into a single, high-stakes narrative. ===== Part 4: Key Players & Factions ===== ==== The Protagonists: The Infinity Watch & Earth's Heroes ==== * **Adam Warlock:** The central character of the entire saga. In //Infinity War//, he is a being of pure logic, forced to out-think his own unrestrained evil. His arc is one of accepting responsibility for the monster he created and demonstrating his worthiness as the universe's ultimate protector through strategy rather than brute force. * **Thanos:** The event's most fascinating character. He acts not out of heroism but out of a profound sense of cosmic order. Magus represents a threat to all of reality, including Death, and Thanos will not abide such a chaotic rival. He is the master strategist, the detective who uncovers Magus's true plan, and the unlikely savior whose deep knowledge of cosmic power proves indispensable. * **The Infinity Watch:** Gamora, Drax, Pip, and Moondragon serve as Warlock's loyal guardians and frontline soldiers. Their trust in Warlock is tested, and they provide the ground-level perspective on the cosmic conflict. * **Earth's Heroes:** Figures like Captain America, [[mister_fantastic|Mister Fantastic]], [[doctor_strange|Doctor Strange]], and the [[silver_surfer|Silver Surfer]] act as the primary line of defense. They represent the collective will of life to resist oblivion, but they are often outmaneuvered by the cosmic scale of Magus's plans, highlighting the need for specialists like Warlock and Thanos. ==== The Antagonists: Magus and his Forces ==== * **The Magus:** The ultimate villain of the piece. He is not a simple brute but a dark reflection of Warlock's own formidable intellect and power. He is arrogant, cruel, and nihilistic, viewing existence as a flawed canvas he must paint over. His brilliance is his greatest weapon; he anticipates the heroes' moves and very nearly succeeds in out-maneuvering Warlock and Thanos. He represents the terrifying potential of Warlock's power without a moral compass. * **The Doppelgangers:** These monstrous beings are the event's most iconic element. They are not merely clones but twisted personifications of their originals' inner darkness and potential for evil. The six-armed Spider-Man doppelganger, the feral Beast, and the grotesque Mister Fantastic are all designed to be psychologically unsettling, forcing the heroes to destroy a part of themselves. ==== Wild Cards: Cosmic & Mortal Schemers ==== * **Doctor Doom:** As is his nature, Victor von Doom refuses to be a pawn in anyone's game. He correctly identifies the source of Magus's power and, in a moment of extreme hubris, attempts to steal it for himself. He is defeated but serves as a reminder that even amidst a reality-ending crisis, human ambition remains a potent force. * **Kang the Conqueror:** The master of time also enters the fray, seeking to claim Magus's power to control all of history. His involvement, alongside Doom's, turns the final battle into a chaotic free-for-all, with multiple factions vying for the ultimate prize. * **Galactus and the Cosmic Pantheon:** Beings like [[galactus|Galactus]], Kronos, [[odin|Odin]], and [[zeus|Zeus]] initially confront Magus but are soundly defeated. Their failure serves to establish the monumental scale of Magus's threat level, proving he is a danger that even the universe's oldest and most powerful entities cannot handle alone. ===== Part 5: Major Tie-Ins & Subplots ===== The main six-issue series tells the core story, but the numerous tie-in issues were crucial for fleshing out the scope of the conflict and its impact across the Marvel Universe. ==== Warlock and the Infinity Watch Tie-Ins ==== As the flagship tie-in title, this series (issues #7-10) provided the essential prelude and connective tissue for the event. It detailed the Infinity Watch's initial struggles, their investigation into the cosmic disturbances, and provided deeper insight into Adam Warlock's mindset. It was in these pages that Thanos began his investigation in earnest, setting him on the path to his alliance with Warlock. ==== The "Heroes vs. Doppelgangers" Subplots ==== Many tie-ins focused on the street-level chaos caused by the doppelganger invasion, answering the fan question, "What was my favorite hero doing during //Infinity War//?" * **Fantastic Four #366-370:** This arc was a cornerstone, with the team's headquarters serving as the heroes' command center. It featured a prolonged and harrowing battle with the twisted doppelgangers of not just the heroes, but also their greatest villains. * **Spider-Man #24:** Showcased Peter Parker's personal battle against his six-armed, monstrous double while also dealing with the wider chaos in New York, collaborating with heroes like Daredevil and Moon Knight. * **Captain America #408:** Focused on Steve Rogers' role as the ultimate field commander, trying to organize the disparate heroes into an effective fighting force against an enemy that wore their friends' faces. ==== The Cosmic Conspiracy ==== Titles like //Silver Surfer// Vol. 3 #67-69 and //Quasar// #38 followed the cosmic heroes as they fought Magus's forces on a galactic scale. This is where Thanos's subplot unfolded, as he journeyed to Death's realm and pieced together the true nature of Magus's plot. This subplot was vital for establishing Thanos's motivations and his unique position as the only being with the knowledge and amorality to see the solution Warlock couldn't. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== While //The Infinity War// itself has not been directly adapted often, its themes and characters have appeared in other media. * **Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU):** As detailed extensively above, the film //Avengers: Infinity War// bears no resemblance to this comic's plot. It is instead an adaptation of [[infinity_gauntlet_(comics)|The Infinity Gauntlet]] and 2013's //Infinity//. Adam Warlock and the Magus have yet to play a significant role in the MCU, though Warlock made his debut in //Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3//. * **What If...? Vol 2, #49 (1993):** Titled "//What If the Silver Surfer Possessed the Infinity Gauntlet?//," this issue explored an alternate outcome to the preceding //Infinity Gauntlet// event. While not a direct variant of //Infinity War//, it plays with the same core theme: the corruption of a noble hero by ultimate power, showing a Surfer who attempts to "perfect" the universe with disastrous results, a path similar to what The Goddess would later attempt in //The Infinity Crusade//. * **Video Game Adaptations:** The influence of the "Infinity" saga is felt in several games. The 1995 Capcom fighting game //Marvel Super Heroes// is loosely based on //The Infinity Gauntlet// but its final boss is a Doctor Doom who has stolen Thanos's power, echoing Doom's role in //Infinity War//. The Facebook game //Marvel: Avengers Alliance// featured a "Special Operations" mission heavily inspired by //Infinity War//, where players had to fight an army of doppelgangers unleashed by Magus. ===== See Also ===== * [[infinity_gauntlet_(comics)]] * [[infinity_crusade]] * [[adam_warlock]] * [[thanos]] * [[magus_(marvel_comics)]] * [[infinity_watch]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((//The Infinity War// #1 was released in June 1992.)) ((The popular "Doppelganger" character, a twisted six-armed version of Spider-Man who survived the event, would go on to become a recurring antagonist, most famously during the //Maximum Carnage// storyline.)) ((A key plot point involves Thanos discovering that the "Cosmic Cubes" Magus was collecting were, in fact, more powerful and stable artifacts called Cosmic Containment Units. This discovery was crucial in understanding the scale of Magus's power.)) ((Many fans and critics consider //The Infinity War// to be darker and more complex than its predecessor, focusing less on a straightforward quest and more on psychological warfare and cosmic intrigue.)) ((Ron Lim's artwork on all three "Infinity" series is considered iconic, and his depictions of cosmic battles and characters like Thanos and Warlock defined the look of Marvel's cosmic landscape for the entire 1990s.)) ((The naming confusion between the comic and the MCU film is a frequent topic of discussion in fan communities, often used as a prime example of how the MCU streamlines and remixes comic book lore for a broader audience.))