Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack 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 Marvel Cinematic Universe Multiverse ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: The Marvel Multiverse is the foundational cosmic structure comprising an infinite number of parallel universes, each a distinct reality with its own history and variations of iconic characters, which collectively form the entirety of Marvel's narrative tapestry.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** It serves as the ultimate narrative engine, allowing for endless storytelling possibilities, alternate character versions (Variants), and the exploration of "what if" scenarios without disrupting the core continuity. In the [[marvel_cinematic_universe|Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)]], it is the central concept of the post-Infinity Saga narrative, appropriately titled //The Multiverse Saga//. * **Primary Impact:** Its introduction into the mainstream MCU has enabled the integration of characters from previous, non-MCU Marvel film franchises (such as Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield's Spider-Men) and has established [[kang_the_conqueror|Kang the Conqueror]] and his variants as the next Thanos-level threat to all of reality. * **Key Incarnations:** In the comics, the Multiverse is an ancient, naturally occurring, and infinitely branching construct, historically policed by entities like the Captain Britain Corps and the Living Tribunal. In the MCU, the Multiverse was artificially suppressed for eons into a single "Sacred Timeline" by He Who Remains and the [[time_variance_authority|Time Variance Authority (TVA)]] to prevent a catastrophic multiversal war, only to be unleashed following his death. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The concept of a multiverse was not a day-one invention for Marvel Comics but rather an elegant solution to continuity puzzles and a wellspring for creative storytelling. The idea first took concrete form in the Silver Age, largely as a way to connect the company's 1940s Golden Age heroes with its new slate of 1960s characters. The seminal story is often cited as ''The Flash #123'' (1961) from rival DC Comics, which introduced Earth-Two. Marvel followed suit, with early explorations of alternate realities and dimensions in series like `[[doctor_strange]]`'s adventures in Steve Ditko's surreal landscapes. The term **Earth-616**, the designation for the prime Marvel Comics universe, has a surprisingly specific origin. It was first used in the UK-based ''The Daredevils #7'' (1983) in a Captain Britain story written by Alan Moore (though sometimes credited to Dave Thorpe). The number was chosen arbitrarily, intended to be a subtle jab at the tendency for other publishers to designate their main reality as "Earth-One." For decades, this was an inside joke for dedicated fans, but it was eventually canonized and is now the universally accepted term for the primary comic book reality. Writers like Roy Thomas, Steve Englehart, and Mark Gruenwald greatly expanded the multiverse concept through the 70s and 80s. However, it was Jonathan Hickman's epic run on ''Avengers'' and ''New Avengers'' (2012-2015), culminating in the ''[[secret_wars_2015|Secret Wars]]'' event, that truly centered the Multiverse as the most critical element of Marvel cosmology, exploring its death and rebirth in a way that redefined the entire comic line. This storyline has become a major inspiration for the MCU's own Multiverse Saga. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The origin of the Marvel Comics Multiverse is an epic, near-incomprehensible cosmic saga. It is not a recent creation but the result of a cyclical process of cosmic death and rebirth. The Multiverse that readers have known for most of Marvel's history is, in fact, the **Seventh Cosmos**. Before it, there was the First Cosmos, a singular, sentient universe. Its end led to the creation of the Second Cosmos, the first to introduce the concept of parallel realities. This cycle repeated, with each iteration of the Multiverse growing more complex. The Sixth Cosmos was consumed by powerful beings known as the Beyonders, leading to a period of cosmic void before the Big Bang that created the Seventh Multiverse. This Seventh Multiverse is the one readers are most familiar with. It is a naturally occurring, infinitely branching system. Every decision, every random chance, creates a new divergent timeline that becomes its own fully-fledged universe. These universes exist as separate "membranes" vibrating at different frequencies, floating within a medium called the **Superflow**. Travel between them is difficult, typically requiring immense cosmic power, advanced technology, or access to a rare **Nexus of All Realities**, a cross-dimensional gateway often found in a swamp in the Florida Everglades and guarded by the [[man-thing|Man-Thing]]. This structure was historically overseen by cosmic entities. The **Living Tribunal**, a being with three faces representing Equity, Necessity, and Vengeance, served as the ultimate judge, intervening only when the entire Multiversal balance was at risk. Each universe also had its own abstract entities, like Eternity (the sum of all life in that universe) and Death. For a time, the **Captain Britain Corps**, an interdimensional league of heroes, policed the Multiverse from their base in the Starlight Citadel. This era came to a cataclysmic end with the "Incursions," an event where universes began colliding and annihilating each other, a multiversal decay engineered by the Beyonders. This led to the events of ''Secret Wars (2015)'', where the Multiverse died and was temporarily replaced by a patchwork reality called Battleworld, before being reborn by [[reed_richards|Reed Richards]] as the Eighth Cosmos. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's Multiverse has a dramatically different and more deliberate origin, rooted in conflict and control. For eons, a true, chaotic multiverse existed, much like its comic book counterpart. However, in the 31st century on one particular Earth, a scientist named Nathaniel Richards discovered the existence of these parallel realities. So did his other selves, his **Variants**. While some, like him, sought peaceful collaboration and knowledge-sharing, others saw only new worlds to conquer. The result was a devastating **Multiversal War**, where infinite versions of this man—who would come to be known as Kang—fought for supremacy, threatening to annihilate all of existence. The original Nathaniel Richards variant discovered a creature called **Alioth**, a being capable of consuming space and time itself. He weaponized it, ended the war by destroying all other Kang variants, and isolated a cluster of timelines, weaving them together into what he called the **"Sacred Timeline."** This was not a single universe but a carefully curated collection of realities that all flowed in the same general direction, all leading to his own birth and preventing the rise of his dangerous Variants. To maintain this artificial order, he created the **Time Variance Authority (TVA)**, a bureaucratic organization existing outside of time, and populated it with brainwashed Variants from pruned timelines. He hid his identity, presenting himself to the TVA through android "Time-Keepers" and taking on the moniker **He Who Remains**. The TVA's sole purpose was to monitor the Sacred Timeline for any "Nexus Events"—moments where an individual's choice created a divergent branch that could potentially lead to the birth of a new Kang Variant. When such a branch occurred, the TVA would arrive, "prune" the branch (erasing it and its inhabitants from existence), and arrest the Variant responsible for the deviation. This enforced peace lasted for millennia until two Variants of [[loki|Loki]]—the protagonist Loki and his female Variant, Sylvie—managed to reach He Who Remains's fortress, the Citadel at the End of Time. Despite his warnings that his death would unleash his infinitely more dangerous selves, Sylvie, driven by revenge for having her life stolen by the TVA, killed him. His death shattered the Sacred Timeline, causing it to instantly and chaotically branch out into a new, untamed Multiverse, setting the stage for the MCU's Multiverse Saga. ===== Part 3: Laws, Structures, and Key Concepts ===== === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === The comic multiverse is governed by a complex set of rules and defined by specific cosmic structures. * **Core Structure and Designations:** The standard model is the **Orrery of Worlds**, a map of the known multiverse. Each universe is designated with a number, typically "Earth-" followed by a unique integer (e.g., Earth-616, Earth-1610). These universes are separated by vibrational frequencies. * **Travel and Access:** * **Magic:** Sorcerers Supreme like Doctor Strange can use spells to traverse realities. * **Technology:** Devices like Reed Richards' "Bridge" or technology from Kang the Conqueror allow for physical travel. * **Cosmic Power:** Beings like the Silver Surfer or America Chavez can navigate the Superflow. * **Nexus of All Realities:** A physical, cross-dimensional hub, with the primary one on Earth-616 located in a Florida swamp. * **Key Concepts:** * **Nexus Beings:** Rare individuals who are a focal point of their reality's energy and are identical across the multiverse, acting as anchors. The [[scarlet_witch|Scarlet Witch]] is the Nexus Being of Earth-616. * **Incursions:** A multiversal cancer that causes two Earths to become the focal point of their colliding universes. For eight hours, they occupy the same space. If one Earth is not destroyed, both universes are annihilated. This was the central conflict of Hickman's ''Avengers'' run. * **The Superflow:** The void-like medium in which individual universes exist. * **The Living Tribunal:** The ultimate arbiter of cosmic law, whose judgment is final. He exists simultaneously in all universes at once. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's multiverse, being newer, has a more narratively focused set of rules, many of which have been established in service of the ongoing saga. * **Core Structure and Designations:** Post-''Loki'', the structure is a rapidly expanding network of branching timelines. While the main MCU reality was designated **Earth-199999** in official guidebooks, it was referred to as **Earth-616** by Christine Palmer of Earth-838 in ''[[doctor_strange_in_the_multiverse_of_madness|Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness]]''. This has created debate among fans as to whether it is a retcon or simply the designation used by another universe's inhabitants.((The designation of the main MCU reality as "Earth-616" is a point of contention. For years, the official ''Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z'' designated it as Earth-199999. The in-film use of "616" could be a simple Easter egg, an acknowledgement of its comic roots, or a deliberate retcon by Marvel Studios to align its primary universe with the iconic comic number.)) Other realities, like the one featuring the Illuminati, have been explicitly numbered (e.g., **Earth-838**). * **Travel and Access:** * **Magic:** Powerful sorcerers can travel, though it is extremely dangerous. Doctor Strange uses the //Book of the Vishanti//, while Scarlet Witch uses the malevolent //[[darkhold]]// for a dangerous form of projection called **Dreamwalking**. * **Unique Abilities:** [[america_chavez|America Chavez]] possesses the unique and uncontrollable power to punch open star-shaped portals into any other universe. * **Technology:** The TVA uses **TemPads** to open doorways through time and to other realities. Kang the Conqueror's **Time Chair** is also a sophisticated vehicle for multiversal travel. * **Key Concepts:** * **Variants:** Any individual who deviates from their prescribed path on the Sacred Timeline, or who simply exists in a different universe, is a Variant. They can look identical (Loki and Sylvie) or wildly different (Alligator Loki). * **Nexus Events:** The specific point of deviation from the Sacred Timeline that creates a branch reality. * **Incursions:** In the MCU, an incursion is the collision of two universes, but the cause is different from the comics. It is triggered by the footprint of a multiversal traveler. An extended stay or a significant disruption in a foreign universe can cause the boundaries between it and the traveler's home reality to erode, leading to total annihilation for one or both. * **Dreamwalking:** A forbidden spell from the Darkhold that allows a sorcerer to possess the body of their Variant in another universe. It is a violation of the natural order and leaves a significant multiversal footprint. ===== Part 4: Key Locations, Inhabitants & Guardians ===== ==== Key Locations ==== * **The Citadel at the End of Time (MCU):** The fortress of He Who Remains, located in a temporal singularity, from which he managed the Sacred Timeline. * **The Time Variance Authority (MCU):** A vast, retro-futuristic bureaucracy existing outside of normal time-space. It serves as the headquarters for the agents and analysts who police the timeline. * **The Nexus of All Realities (Comics & MCU):** A powerful interdimensional crossroads. In the comics, it's a major location. In the MCU, it's been hinted at, with [[man-thing]], its guardian, appearing in ''Werewolf by Night'' at what is implied to be this location. * **Battleworld (Comics):** A patchwork planet created by Doctor Doom from the remnants of dozens of dead universes following the final Incursion. It was the setting for the entirety of the 2015 ''Secret Wars'' event. * **The Gap Junction (MCU):** A strange, sterile space that exists between universes, seen briefly in ''Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness'' as a pathway for multiversal travelers. ==== Key Inhabitants & Travelers ==== * **[[kang_the_conqueror|Kang the Conqueror]] and His Variants (MCU & Comics):** The central figures of the Multiverse. In the comics, Kang is a time-traveling despot, but his other selves (Immortus, Rama-Tut, Scarlet Centurion) are key players. In the MCU, the **Council of Kangs**—an infinite assembly of his Variants—are poised to become the primary antagonists of the Multiverse Saga. * **[[america_chavez|America Chavez]] (MCU & Comics):** A young hero with the innate ability to travel the multiverse. In the MCU, her power is unique and coveted by those who would seek to control it, like the Scarlet Witch. * **[[doctor_strange|Doctor Strange]] (MCU & Comics):** As the Sorcerer Supreme (or a master sorcerer), he is often on the front lines of defending his reality from multiversal and extra-dimensional threats. * **The Watcher (MCU & Comics):** Uatu, a member of an ancient alien race, is assigned to observe Earth-616. His oath is to never interfere. In the comics, he breaks this oath frequently. In the MCU's ''What If...?'' series, he serves as the narrator, observing alternate realities, and is eventually forced to intervene to stop an Infinity Stone-powered Ultron Variant from destroying the Multiverse. ==== Guardians & Regulators ==== * **The Living Tribunal (Comics & MCU):** The ultimate cosmic judge. In the comics, he is a character of immense power and importance. In the MCU, his likeness was briefly seen as a statue on a world Loki and Sylvie passed through in the Void, and his three-faced head appeared as Doctor Strange and America Chavez fell through the multiverse, confirming his existence. * **The Illuminati (Comics & MCU):** A secret cabal of the world's most intelligent and influential heroes. In the comics (Earth-616), they formed to secretly manage global and cosmic threats, but their actions often led to disaster, including accidentally triggering the Incursions. In the MCU (Earth-838), they successfully defeated Thanos and managed their world's threats, but became arrogant and ruthless in the process. * **The Captain Britain Corps (Comics):** A multiversal force of heroes, each one a Captain Britain from a different universe, tasked with protecting the multiverse from threats. Their power is derived from the Starlight Citadel, a nexus of magical energy. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== ==== Secret Wars (2015) (Comics) ==== This is arguably the most significant multiverse-centric event in Marvel Comics history. The storyline was the culmination of Jonathan Hickman's long-running narrative. The premise was that the entire multiverse was dying due to the Incursions. The final Incursion involved the last two surviving universes: Earth-616 and the Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610). Both were destroyed, but [[doctor_doom|Doctor Doom]], having stolen the power of the Beyonders, salvaged fragments of dozens of dead realities and stitched them together to form **Battleworld**, a new planet which he ruled as God-Emperor. The event saw survivors from Earth-616 challenge Doom's rule, with Reed Richards ultimately seizing his power and, with the help of his son Franklin, rebuilding the multiverse from scratch, starting a new Eighth Cosmos. ==== The Multiverse Saga (MCU) ==== Spanning Phases 4, 5, and 6 of the MCU, this entire narrative arc is the cinematic equivalent of a grand multiversal event. * **Setup (Phase 4):** ''[[loki_season_1|Loki]]'' established the rules: the Multiversal War, He Who Remains, the TVA, and the unleashing of the branching timelines. ''[[spider-man_no_way_home|Spider-Man: No Way Home]]'' showed the immediate consequences, as a botched spell pulled Variants of Spider-Man's allies and villains from other universes (specifically, the Sam Raimi and Marc Webb film series) into the main MCU. ''[[doctor_strange_in_the_multiverse_of_madness|Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness]]'' explored the horror and danger of multiversal travel, introducing Incursions and the concept of Dreamwalking. * **Conflict (Phase 5):** ''[[ant-man_and_the_wasp_quantumania|Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania]]'' formally introduced the primary antagonist: Kang the Conqueror, a brilliant but exiled Variant. Its post-credits scene revealed the **Council of Kangs**, a massive gathering of Kang Variants from across the multiverse who view the MCU's heroes as a growing threat to their power. * **Climax (Phase 6):** The saga is set to conclude with two major crossover films, ''Avengers: The Kang Dynasty'' and ''Avengers: Secret Wars'', which are expected to adapt elements of the comic storylines and bring the full-scale multiversal war to the MCU. ==== Spider-Verse (Comics & Film) ==== While the animated ''Spider-Verse'' films are not part of the MCU, their cultural impact on popularizing the multiverse is undeniable and has heavily influenced audience reception of MCU concepts. The original 2014 comic storyline, ''Spider-Verse'', introduced the Inheritors, a family of multiversal predators who feed on the life force of "Spider-Totems" (i.e., anyone with spider-powers). This forced every Spider-Man, Spider-Woman, and Spider-Animal from across the multiverse to team up. The core concept of the **Web of Life and Destiny**, a cosmic construct that connects all Spider-Totems, is central to this mythology. The success of the storyline and its animated film adaptations created a mainstream appetite for Variant storytelling that the MCU capitalized on with ''No Way Home'' and ''Loki''. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== ==== Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610) ==== Launched in 2000, the Ultimate Marvel line was an attempt to create a fresh, modernized version of Marvel's most popular characters without the baggage of 40 years of continuity. This universe, designated Earth-1610, was grittier and more cinematic. It was the birthplace of Miles Morales and the Samuel L. Jackson-inspired Nick Fury, both of whom would later be integrated into the main comic universe and the MCU, respectively. The Ultimate Universe was a massive creative success and heavily influenced the tone and aesthetic of the early MCU films. It was ultimately destroyed during its Incursion with Earth-616 in the prelude to ''Secret Wars (2015)''. ==== Earth-838 (MCU) ==== This reality was explored in ''Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness''. It represents a world where heroes made different, arguably more pragmatic and ruthless, choices. Their version of the Illuminati (featuring Captain Carter, Captain Marvel (Maria Rambeau), Black Bolt, Mister Fantastic, and Professor X) successfully defeated Thanos on Titan by killing him. However, they also determined their own Doctor Strange was the greatest threat to their universe after he used the Darkhold, and they executed him. This universe showcased a technologically advanced society but one ruled by a secretive and deadly council, a dark reflection of what the heroes of Earth-616 could become. ==== The //What If...?// Universes (MCU) ==== The animated series ''What If...?'' is a direct exploration of the MCU's multiverse, guided by The Watcher. Each episode showcases a different reality where a single choice created a new timeline. Notable universes include: * **Captain Carter's Reality:** Where Peggy Carter took the Super-Soldier Serum instead of Steve Rogers. * **Marvel Zombies Reality:** Where a quantum virus turned most of the world's heroes into intelligent zombies. * **Infinity Ultron's Reality:** A universe where Ultron successfully uploaded his consciousness into Vision's body and acquired all six Infinity Stones, becoming a threat to the entire multiverse. These stories are not just isolated tales; The Watcher eventually brought several of these heroes together as the **Guardians of the Multiverse** to fight Infinity Ultron, proving their interconnectedness within the larger MCU Multiverse. ===== See Also ===== * [[kang_the_conqueror]] * [[doctor_strange]] * [[time_variance_authority]] * [[loki]] * [[scarlet_witch]] * [[secret_wars_2015]] * [[variants]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The concept of a "dimension" versus a "universe" is often used interchangeably but has a specific distinction in Marvel cosmology. A universe is a complete space-time continuum. A dimension (like the Dark Dimension or the Quantum Realm) is a separate plane of existence that is often connected to a host universe but operates under different physical laws. One can travel to another dimension without necessarily traveling to another universe.)) ((The first explicit mention of a parallel universe in what would become Marvel Comics was in a 1940s Captain America story where he visits a world called "Hurlandia." However, this was a one-off story and not part of a larger, codified multiverse at the time.)) ((In Jonathan Hickman's ''Secret Wars'', the reason the Beyonders engineered the Incursions and the death of the Seventh Multiverse was revealed to be a simple, terrifying experiment: they wanted to see what would happen if they killed everything.)) ((Fan theories about the MCU's ''Avengers: Secret Wars'' abound, with many speculating it will serve as a soft-reboot of the franchise, allowing Marvel Studios to integrate characters from the X-Men and Fantastic Four franchises seamlessly into the main MCU reality, similar to how the comic event merged the 616 and 1610 universes.)) ((The number 616 was supposedly chosen by Alan Moore/Dave Thorpe because 666, the Number of the Beast, was too obvious, so they transposed the last two digits. Another story suggests it was simply the number they came up with when asked to invent one.))