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 Wars ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **The "Infinity Wars" are a collection of universe-spanning conflicts across different realities, primarily defined by the struggle to control the six Infinity Gems (or Stones), artifacts of such immense power that they grant their wielder omnipotence and mastery over all of existence.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** These events represent the apex of cosmic-level threats in the Marvel Universe, forcing heroes, villains, and cosmic entities alike to confront the ultimate nature of power and reality itself. They are benchmark events that redefine the cosmic landscape. [[thanos]]. * **Primary Impact:** The outcomes of the Infinity Wars have consistently led to catastrophic loss of life, the restructuring of cosmic hierarchies, the death and rebirth of major characters, and fundamental shifts in the status quo of the universe. [[infinity_gauntlet]]. * **Key Incarnations:** The core distinction lies between the comic book sagas and the cinematic adaptation. The original comic book `''The Infinity War''` (1992) is a sequel to the `''Infinity Gauntlet''` storyline and focuses on [[adam_warlock]]'s evil self, the [[the_magus|Magus]], creating evil doppelgängers of Earth's heroes. The Marvel Cinematic Universe's `''Avengers: Infinity War''` is a direct conflict with Thanos himself, who seeks to erase half of all life in the universe. A later comic event, `''Infinity Wars''` (2018), features Gamora as the antagonist seeking to reshape reality. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The term "Infinity Wars" encompasses several distinct but thematically linked properties. The foundational comic book storyline is `''The Infinity War''`, a six-issue limited series published by Marvel Comics in 1992. It was the direct sequel to the blockbuster 1991 event `''The Infinity Gauntlet''`. The creative team was largely the same, helmed by writer [[jim_starlin]], with pencil work by [[ron_lim]] and inks by Al Milgrom. Starlin intended this to be the second part of a grand "Infinity Trilogy," exploring the consequences of Adam Warlock gaining the Gauntlet. It was a massive crossover event, with dozens of tie-in issues across Marvel's publishing line, reflecting the high stakes and cosmic scope of the story. Decades later, in 2018, Marvel Comics launched a new event titled `''Infinity Wars''`. This series, written by Gerry Duggan with art by Mike Deodato Jr., served as the culmination of a storyline built through books like `''Guardians of the Galaxy''` and the `''Infinity Countdown''` prelude. While it utilized the Infinity Stones, it told a completely new story centered on Gamora and a mysterious new villain named Requiem, ultimately leading to the "Warp World" reality mash-up. In the realm of cinema, the concept was adapted into the two-part climax of the MCU's "Infinity Saga." `''Avengers: Infinity War''` (2018) and its sequel `''Avengers: Endgame''` (2019) were directed by Anthony and Joe Russo and written by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely. These films drew thematic inspiration from both `''The Infinity Gauntlet''` and Jonathan Hickman's `''Infinity''` (2013) storyline, but crafted a unique narrative that streamlined the cosmic lore for a global audience, focusing squarely on Thanos as the central antagonist. The films became cultural phenomena, shattering box office records and serving as the culmination of over a decade of interconnected storytelling. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== === The Infinity War (1992) & The Infinity Trilogy (Earth-616) === The genesis of this conflict is deeply tied to the events of `''The Infinity Gauntlet''`. After defeating Thanos, the godlike Adam Warlock took possession of the Infinity Gauntlet. To prove himself worthy of this ultimate power, he was put on trial by the Living Tribunal, who decreed that such a being was too volatile. The Tribunal ordered Warlock to separate the Infinity Gems and distribute them among guardians of his choosing. He complied, forming the [[infinity_watch]] with Gamora (Time), Pip the Troll (Space), Drax the Destroyer (Power), Moondragon (Mind), and a secret fifth member—Thanos himself (Reality), whom Warlock believed was the only being who truly understood the Gems' nature. Warlock kept the Soul Gem for himself. However, in the process of expunging his good and evil sides to become a being of pure logic, Warlock unknowingly released his dark half: the Magus. The Magus, a being of immense power and cunning, had been trapped within the Soul Gem for years and represented Warlock's ambition and lust for power. Free once more, his goal was to reacquire the Infinity Gauntlet and reshape the universe into a twisted image of order under his control. The Magus began his assault by creating an army of evil doppelgängers of Earth's heroes and villains, sowing chaos and confusion. His masterstroke was activating five cosmic "containment units"—revealed to be disguised Cosmic Cubes—to manifest a pocket dimension and bring his own reality into being, threatening to overwrite the prime universe. The heroes of Earth, led by the Fantastic Four and the Avengers, were thrown into disarray by their malevolent duplicates. The cosmic entities Eternity and Infinity were rendered catatonic, unable to intervene. This crisis forced Adam Warlock and the Infinity Watch to reunite and, in a shocking twist, form a desperate alliance with the only being who could match the Magus's strategic genius and knowledge of the Gauntlet: the recently defeated Thanos. The Mad Titan agreed to help, not out of altruism, but because the Magus represented a threat to all existence, including his own. === Infinity Wars (2018) (Earth-616) === The 2018 event presents a completely different origin. The conflict began when the Infinity Stones, having been destroyed and reformed, became dispersed throughout the galaxy. This sparked a new race to collect them, detailed in the `''Infinity Countdown''` storyline. As various factions vied for control, a new, heavily armed figure named Requiem appeared, systematically hunting down the Stones' wielders. Requiem's true identity was revealed to be Gamora. Her motive stemmed from a horrifying discovery within the Soul Gem: a pocket dimension called Soul World, where a part of her soul had been trapped for years. There, she discovered Devondra, a ravenous soul-eating entity at the heart of the Gem. Gamora believed that Devondra was constantly feeding on the souls of the entire universe, causing endless pain. Her radical solution was to acquire all six Infinity Stones not to destroy half the universe, but to fold it in half, merging every soul with another to create a new, "perfect" universe where Devondra's hunger would be sated and no one would ever be alone. After a brutal confrontation where she seemingly killed Thanos to acquire the Power Stone, Gamora, as Requiem, assembled the full Infinity Gauntlet. Disregarding the warnings of Doctor Strange and Adam Warlock, she snapped her fingers. Instead of achieving her goal, the immense power, combined with Loki's subtle magical manipulation, warped reality in an unexpected way. It created "Warp World," a universe where heroes and villains were fused into composite beings (e.g., Iron Man and Thor became Iron Hammer; Captain America and Doctor Strange became the Soldier Supreme). The core conflict of `''Infinity Wars''` became the struggle of the "un-warped" heroes to unravel this new reality and stop Gamora before her actions permanently broke the fabric of existence. === The Infinity Saga (MCU - Earth-199999) === The Marvel Cinematic Universe's version of the Infinity War has its roots stretching back to Thanos's first appearance. Unlike the comics, where his goal was to court the cosmic entity Death, the MCU's Thanos is driven by a Malthusian ideology. He believes that life, left unchecked, will expand beyond its means and consume itself, leading to universal collapse, a fate he witnessed on his home planet of Titan. His solution is what he considers a merciful, if brutal, one: to use the power of the six Infinity Stones to erase half of all sentient life, randomly and without prejudice. He calls this "balancing the universe." His quest began in earnest after the Avengers' repeated successes in foiling his agents (like Loki and Ronan the Accuser). Forging a new Infinity Gauntlet with the dwarf king Eitri, Thanos and his lieutenants, the Black Order, began a ruthless campaign to acquire the Stones. He decimated Xandar to get the Power Stone, intercepted the Asgardian refugee ship for the Space Stone, sacrificed his beloved adopted daughter Gamora on Vormir for the Soul Stone, tore the Mind Stone from Vision's head, and tortured Nebula to force Gamora to reveal the location of the Reality Stone on Knowhere. He outsmarted Doctor Strange on Titan to acquire the Time Stone. The conflict culminated in a massive battle in Wakanda. Despite the combined might of the Avengers, the Guardians of the Galaxy, and the armies of Wakanda, Thanos proved unstoppable. In the battle's final moments, Thor grievously wounded Thanos with his new axe, Stormbreaker, but failed to kill him instantly. This gave Thanos the opening he needed to snap his fingers, succeeding in his goal and turning to dust half of all life across the cosmos, including many of Earth's heroes. This act, known as "The Snap" or "The Decimation," marked the universe's darkest hour and the Avengers' most profound failure. The subsequent events, detailed in `''Avengers: Endgame''`, focus on the survivors' desperate "Time Heist" to retrieve the Infinity Stones from the past and reverse the Snap. ===== Part 3: In-Depth Analysis: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Aftermath ===== === The Infinity War (1992 Comic Event) === ==== Key Turning Points ==== * **The Magus's Emergence:** Adam Warlock expelling his good and evil sides was the inciting incident. The Magus, representing pure ambition, was a far more insidious threat than the nihilistic Thanos. * **The Doppelgänger Invasion:** The use of evil duplicates created widespread chaos and mistrust, effectively neutralizing Earth's heroes by forcing them to fight twisted versions of themselves. * **The Alliance of Necessity:** The decision by Warlock to trust Thanos was a pivotal moment. It showcased the severity of the threat, forcing a hero to ally with a mass-murdering villain. Thanos's expertise proved invaluable in deducing the Magus's true plan. * **Eternity's Defeat:** When the personification of the universe itself is rendered catatonic, the stakes are immediately raised to an existential level. This demonstrated that the Magus's power rivaled that of a fully-powered Gauntlet. * **The Gauntlet's Paradox:** The climax saw the Magus wield a nearly complete Infinity Gauntlet. However, the Reality Gem on it was a clever fake created by Thanos. When Doctor Doom and Kang the Conqueror attempted to steal the Gems, a feedback loop occurred. Warlock, wielding the real Reality Gem, channeled the Gauntlet's power against itself, creating a paradox that left the Magus vulnerable. ==== Aftermath ==== The `''Infinity War''` concluded with the Magus being defeated and trapped once more within the Soul Gem. However, the experience left a deep impact. The Living Tribunal, witnessing the chaos Warlock inadvertently unleashed, declared that he could no longer be trusted with the Gauntlet's full power. The event solidified the necessity of the Infinity Watch, who would continue to guard the individual Gems, leading directly into the third part of the trilogy, `''The Infinity Crusade''`, which focused on the emergence of Warlock's "good" side, the Goddess. Thanos's role as a pragmatic anti-hero was further cemented, setting him on a complex path for years to come. === Infinity Wars (2018 Comic Event) === ==== Key Turning Points ==== * **Gamora as Requiem:** The shocking reveal that the universe's most dangerous woman was the armored antagonist, and her subsequent murder of Thanos, immediately established her as a formidable and ruthless new player on the cosmic stage. * **The Folding of the Universe:** Gamora's "snap" did not erase life but fused it. The creation of Warp World was a creatively bizarre turning point, forcing the remaining heroes like Doctor Strange and Loki to navigate a surreal landscape of composite characters to find a way to undo the damage. * **Loki's Grand Deception:** It was revealed that Loki had been manipulating events from the beginning, seeking to understand the true nature of the Stones. His actions influenced the outcome of Gamora's snap, preventing her intended "perfect" universe from forming. * **Devondra, The Soul-Eater:** The discovery of this cosmic parasite at the heart of Soul World provided the tragic motivation for Gamora's actions and introduced a new, primordial threat to the Marvel cosmology. ==== Aftermath ==== The event concluded with Adam Warlock managing to separate the merged heroes. To preserve the lives of the newly created composite beings of Warp World, Doctor Strange used the Time Stone to copy that reality and place it within the Soul Gem, creating a pocket universe for them to exist in. The Infinity Stones themselves underwent a fundamental change: they developed sentience. No longer inert objects, they chose their own hosts, scattering across the universe to find individuals who embodied their core concept (e.g., the Reality Stone bonded with a future Captain Marvel, the Power Stone with a space gangster). This fundamentally altered the nature of the Infinity Stones for future stories. === Avengers: Infinity War & Endgame (MCU) === ==== Key Turning Points ==== * **Thanos's Victory on Titan:** The battle on Titan was a masterclass in strategy where Thanos single-handedly defeated Iron Man, Doctor Strange, Spider-Man, and the Guardians of the Galaxy. Doctor Strange surrendering the Time Stone in exchange for Tony Stark's life was the most crucial decision of the entire conflict. * **"You Should Have Gone For The Head":** Thor's arrival in Wakanda turned the tide of the battle, but his decision to strike Thanos in the chest—a moment of vengeful pride—instead of a killing blow, proved to be a fatal error that allowed the Snap to happen. * **The Decimation (The Snap):** The single most impactful event in MCU history. The silent, dusting deaths of half the universe's population, including many beloved heroes, created a five-year period of global and cosmic despair. * **The Time Heist:** Scott Lang's return from the Quantum Realm provided the one-in-14-million chance of victory. The plan to travel through time to "borrow" the Infinity Stones from different points in the past was a high-risk, high-reward strategy that formed the backbone of `''Endgame''`. * **"I Am Iron Man":** The final, climactic moment where Tony Stark, using his own nanotech gauntlet, stole the Infinity Stones from Thanos and snapped his fingers to erase Thanos and his army from existence. This act of ultimate sacrifice saved the universe but cost him his life. ==== Aftermath ==== The aftermath of the MCU's Infinity War was profound. While the Blip (the reversal of the Snap) brought everyone back, it created immense societal and logistical chaos after a five-year gap. The universe was saved, but its original Trinity of heroes was gone: Iron Man was dead, Captain America retired to the past, and Thor left Earth with the Guardians of the Galaxy. The Infinity Stones in the main timeline were reduced to atoms by Thanos, and their past versions were returned to their proper places, supposedly ending their threat for good. The event left deep scars on every surviving character and set the stage for a new generation of heroes to rise in a fundamentally changed world. ===== Part 4: Key Players & Factions ===== ==== Protagonists & Heroes ==== * **Adam Warlock:** The central figure of the 1992 comic event. His internal struggle between his logical, good, and evil selves is the catalyst for the entire Infinity Trilogy. He is the strategist and cosmic powerhouse who ultimately confronts the Magus. * **The Avengers (All Versions):** Earth's Mightiest Heroes are the front-line defense in every iteration. In the comics, their ranks are vast, including mainstays like [[captain_america]], [[iron_man]], and [[thor]]. In the MCU, the core six and their expanded roster form the emotional and strategic heart of the resistance against Thanos. * **Doctor Strange:** In all versions, the Sorcerer Supreme is a key player due to his mastery of the mystic arts and his role as a guardian of reality. In the MCU, his foresight via the Time Stone is the single reason the heroes eventually win. In the 2018 comics, he is one of the few who remembers the original reality after the warp. * **Gamora:** A complex figure across the board. In the 1992 story, she is a heroic member of the Infinity Watch. In the MCU, her personal history with Thanos provides the emotional core of the story, and her death is a tragic turning point. In the 2018 event, she becomes the primary antagonist, Requiem. * **Silver Surfer:** A major player in the 1992 comic, acting as a cosmic herald and powerful combatant against the Magus's forces. He is notably absent from the MCU adaptation. ==== Antagonists & Villains ==== * **The Magus:** The primary villain of the 1992 `''The Infinity War''`. He is Adam Warlock's evil future self, a master manipulator who seeks total domination. He is not a nihilist like Thanos, but a tyrant who desires to impose his twisted will on all of reality. * **Thanos:** The central antagonist of the MCU's Infinity Saga and a reluctant anti-hero in the 1992 comic. The MCU version is a philosophical zealot, believing his genocidal plan is a necessary evil. The comic version is far more complex; during the `''Infinity War''`, he aids the heroes purely because the Magus is a threat to his own ambitions and his reverence for Death. * **Requiem (Gamora):** The antagonist of the 2018 `''Infinity Wars''`. Driven by a warped sense of compassion, her goal is to end universal suffering by forcibly merging all of existence, making her a tragic and misguided villain. * **The Black Order (MCU):** Also known as the "Children of Thanos." In the MCU, they are Thanos's formidable generals (Ebony Maw, Cull Obsidian, Proxima Midnight, Corvus Glaive) who lead his armies and hunt the Infinity Stones. Their comic book counterparts are a different group with a different purpose. * **The Doppelgängers:** The mindless, monstrous duplicates of Earth's heroes that serve as the Magus's shock troops in the 1992 comic event. They are physically powerful but lack the intellect and spirit of their originals. ==== Cosmic Entities ==== * **The Living Tribunal:** The ultimate judge of the Marvel multiverse in the comics. His role is to maintain cosmic balance. He forces Warlock to give up the Gauntlet after `''The Infinity Gauntlet''`, which inadvertently leads to the `''Infinity War''`. * **Eternity & Infinity:** The abstract personifications of the entire space-time continuum in the comics. Their incapacitation by the Magus is the ultimate sign of the universal peril, forcing mortals and lesser cosmic beings to solve the crisis themselves. * **Death:** The abstract entity that the comic book Thanos is obsessed with impressing. While she plays a major role in `''The Infinity Gauntlet''`, her presence in `''The Infinity War''` is more subtle, as Thanos acts to preserve a universe she can exist in. She is not personified in the MCU. ===== Part 5: Thematic Analysis & Legacy ===== ==== The Nature of Power & Responsibility ==== Every Infinity War story is a profound meditation on absolute power. The Infinity Gauntlet offers omnipotence, but the narrative consistently shows that no single being—hero or villain—is emotionally or psychologically stable enough to wield it responsibly. In the comics, Adam Warlock, a near-perfect being, still unleashes his own worst self. In the MCU, the Gauntlet's power physically destroys its users, from the Hulk's maimed arm to Tony Stark's death. The ultimate lesson is one of responsibility: power is not merely for acquisition, but for safeguarding, and its greatest use is often in its relinquishment or sacrifice. ==== Identity and Duality ==== This theme is most prominent in the comic book versions. The 1992 `''The Infinity War''` is a literal exploration of identity, pitting heroes against their own dark reflections and centering on Adam Warlock's fractured psyche (Warlock vs. Magus vs. Goddess). The 2018 `''Infinity Wars''` takes this even further with the Warp World concept, physically fusing identities to question the core of who these characters are. It asks whether a merged soul is a new, complete being or an abomination, exploring the desire for connection and the fear of losing one's self. ==== Sacrifice vs. Tyranny ==== The MCU's Infinity Saga presents a stark contrast between two opposing philosophies. Thanos represents tyranny born from a twisted sense of utilitarianism; he is willing to sacrifice trillions of strangers to enact his vision for a "grateful universe." His actions are impersonal and imposed. The heroes, conversely, embody personal sacrifice. Captain America is willing to "trade lives" but not principles. Black Widow sacrifices herself for the Soul Stone to save her found family. And most poignantly, Tony Stark sacrifices his own life, his family, and his future to save everyone else. The conflict argues that true salvation comes not from forcibly culling the universe, but from the willingness of individuals to give everything of themselves for others. This thematic core is arguably why the films resonated so deeply with a global audience. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610):** In the Ultimate Marvel comics, the Infinity Gems appeared in various storylines, but a large-scale "Infinity War" event as seen in Earth-616 did not occur before the universe's destruction in `''Secret Wars''` (2015). The gems were scattered and individually sought after by villains like Kang the Conqueror. * **Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite (Video Game):** This fighting game features a main story mode where Ultron (from Marvel) and Sigma (from Capcom) use the Space and Reality Stones to merge their two universes, becoming Ultron Sigma. The heroes and villains from both franchises must team up to find the remaining Infinity Stones and stop them, creating a unique, interactive version of an "Infinity War." * **What If...? (MCU - Disney+):** The animated series explores several alternate timelines branching from the Infinity Saga. * One episode, "What If... T'Challa Became a Star-Lord?", shows a timeline where T'Challa's Ravagers are so effective that they convince Thanos to abandon his plan for genocide, and he becomes a semi-reformed member of their crew. * Another episode, "What If... Zombies?!", depicts a universe where a quantum virus infects the world just before Thanos's arrival. The heroes become zombies, and the series ends with a zombified Thanos, wearing a nearly complete Infinity Gauntlet, arriving on a devastated Earth. * **Avengers Assemble (Animated Series):** This series had its own multi-season arc involving the Infinity Stones. Thanos was the primary antagonist, collecting the stones over time. The finale of the second season, "Avengers World," saw the Avengers battle a fully-powered Thanos in an event that was a simplified, kid-friendly adaptation of the Infinity Gauntlet/War concepts. ===== See Also ===== * [[infinity_gauntlet]] * [[infinity_stones]] * [[thanos]] * [[adam_warlock]] * [[the_magus]] * [[infinity_watch]] * [[avengers_endgame]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The color of the Infinity Gems/Stones is a major point of difference. In the classic Marvel comics (Earth-616), the colors were: Space (Purple), Mind (Blue), Soul (Green), Reality (Yellow), Time (Orange), and Power (Red). For the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the colors were changed to better suit the visual storytelling and to align with specific artifacts: Space (Blue - Tesseract), Mind (Yellow - Loki's Scepter/Vision), Soul (Orange), Reality (Red - Aether), Time (Green - Eye of Agamotto), and Power (Purple - The Orb). Marvel Comics later retconned the gem colors in 2017 to match the more widely-known MCU colors.)) ((Jim Starlin, creator of Thanos and the Infinity Gauntlet saga, has publicly expressed his satisfaction with how the MCU handled Thanos's character in `''Avengers: Infinity War''`, though his original creation was motivated by a nihilistic desire to impress the personification of Death, not a Malthusian philosophy.)) ((In the 1992 `''The Infinity War''` comic, one of the most memorable and bizarre doppelgängers was for Daredevil. The creature, called "Hellspawn," was simply a grotesque, shrieking monster, contrasting heavily with the more humanoid duplicates of other heroes.)) ((The working title for `''Avengers: Endgame''` was kept a closely guarded secret for years to avoid spoilers. It was often referred to on set and in production documents as "Mary Lou 2." The title `''Avengers: Infinity War - Part 2''` was dropped early in development to emphasize that `''Endgame''` was a distinct film, not just the second half of one story.)) ((The 2018 `''Infinity Wars''` event was known for its "Warp World" mash-ups. Some of the most popular creations included Soldier Supreme (Captain America/Doctor Strange), Iron Hammer (Iron Man/Thor), Arachknight (Spider-Man/Moon Knight), and Weapon Hex (Scarlet Witch/X-23).))