The Multiverse Saga

  • Core Identity: The Multiverse Saga is the second major, overarching narrative of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), chronicling the heroes' discovery of and desperate battle against the infinite realities of the multiverse and the devastating consequences of its collapse, primarily orchestrated by the variants of Kang the Conqueror.
  • Key Takeaways:
  • Role in the Universe: This saga serves as the successor to the infinity_saga, expanding the MCU's cosmic scope from interstellar threats to existential, cross-dimensional dangers. It explores concepts like variants, alternate timelines, and incursions, fundamentally challenging the nature of reality itself. kang_the_conqueror.
  • Primary Impact: Its central conflict involves the unraveling of the “Sacred Timeline,” leading to a multiversal war and the eventual collision of universes. This threatens not just one reality, but all realities, with the ultimate climax planned to be a universe-altering event known as secret_wars.
  • Key Incarnations: The Multiverse Saga is a construct of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (Phases Four, Five, and Six). While it draws heavy inspiration from various comic book storylines—most notably Jonathan Hickman's 2015 Secret Wars—there is no single, officially branded “Multiverse Saga” in the Earth-616 comics. Instead, the comics feature decades of distinct, multiverse-spanning events that serve as the saga's source material.

The Multiverse Saga was officially announced and titled by Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige at San Diego Comic-Con on July 23, 2022. This presentation laid out the roadmap for Phases Four, Five, and Six, mirroring the way the infinity_saga had been structured years prior. Feige confirmed that Phase Four served as the foundational chapter, introducing the core concepts and key players. Phase Five would escalate the conflict, centering on the rise of the primary antagonist, Kang the Conqueror. Phase Six is slated to bring the entire narrative to a cataclysmic conclusion with two crossover films: Avengers: The Kang Dynasty and Avengers: Secret Wars. The conceptual seeds of the saga were planted long before the official announcement. The film Doctor Strange (2016) first namedropped the “multiverse,” and Avengers: Endgame (2019) toyed with the mechanics of alternate timelines through its “Time Heist.” However, it was the Disney+ series that truly kicked off the narrative. Loki (Season 1, 2021) was the lynchpin, explicitly defining the rules of the MCU's timeline, introducing the concept of “Variants,” and unleashing the multiverse by killing the timeline's guardian, He Who Remains—the first variant of Kang the Conqueror seen in the MCU. This act served as the saga's true inciting incident, with its ramifications immediately felt in subsequent projects like Spider-Man: No Way Home and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.

In-Universe Origin Story

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the prime Marvel comics continuity, the concept of a multiverse-ending saga is most directly embodied by the epic, multi-year storyline engineered by writer Jonathan Hickman. His run on Avengers and New Avengers, beginning in 2012, established a terrifying, slow-burning cosmic horror: the multiverse was dying. The origin of this decay was revealed to be a premature, multiversal-scale entropy. At the dawn of time, a race of cosmic beings known as the Beyonders conducted an experiment: they created a temporal bottleneck across all realities, with a single Molecule Man in each universe serving as a “bomb.” If he died, his universe died. They set this experiment to conclude in several millennia, but an anomaly caused the first Molecule Man to die billions of years early, triggering a chain reaction. This initiated a series of “Incursions”—events where two Earths from parallel universes would occupy the same space for a brief period. If one Earth was not destroyed, both universes would be annihilated. This existential threat forced the greatest minds of Earth-616, led by Mr. Fantastic and the illuminati, to make impossible choices. They secretly built planet-destroying weapons, sacrificing other Earths to save their own, an act that fractured their moral compass and tore apart the superhero community. Their primary antagonist was not a single villain, but the inexorable collapse of reality itself, along with rival cabals like Namor's Cabal (featuring Thanos) who took a more ruthless approach to survival. Simultaneously, Hickman's Avengers dealt with a different cosmic threat: the Builders, an ancient race attempting to reshape the universe. This storyline expanded the scale of Earth's heroes, proving their mettle on a galactic stage. All these threads culminated in the 2015 event Secret Wars. Doctor Doom, having harnessed the power of the Beyonders, managed to salvage the last remaining fragments of the dying multiverse, forging them into a single patchwork planet called Battleworld, which he ruled as God-Emperor Doom. This event served as the ultimate conclusion to the multiversal collapse, with heroes from the few surviving realities fighting to restore the cosmos. While not called the “Multiverse Saga,” this complex, character-driven narrative about incursions, multiversal war, and the creation of Battleworld is the clear blueprint for the MCU's grand plan.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The origin of the MCU's Multiverse Saga is tied directly to the life and death of a single being: He Who Remains, a 31st-century scientist variant of Nathaniel Richards. As explained in the finale of Loki Season 1, this scientist discovered the existence of parallel universes. Initially, his variants collaborated, sharing knowledge and technology for mutual benefit. However, some variants, whom we would come to know as Kang the Conqueror, saw other universes not as partners, but as realms to be conquered. This led to a devastating multiversal war, where countless timelines were weaponized and destroyed by the warring Kangs. The original scientist variant discovered a creature named Alioth, a being that consumes space and time. He weaponized it, ended the war by consuming all the rival timelines, and isolated a single, “sacred” timeline. To protect this fragile reality from his own variants, he created the Time Variance Authority (TVA), a bureaucratic organization that existed outside of time. The TVA's sole purpose was to “prune” any branching timeline that deviated from the predetermined path, thus preventing any new Kang variants from ever coming into existence. This carefully constructed peace lasted for eons until the events of Avengers: Endgame, where the Avengers' Time Heist created significant branches. One such branch allowed a 2012 variant of Loki to escape, leading to his capture by the TVA. Alongside his own female variant, Sylvie, Loki unraveled the secrets of the TVA and confronted He Who Remains at the Citadel at the End of Time. He Who Remains offered them a choice: take over his job and manage the Sacred Timeline, or kill him and unleash the multiverse, risking another multiversal war. Believing all beings deserve free will, Sylvie rejected his control and killed him. His death shattered the Sacred Timeline, causing it to instantly fracture into an infinite number of branching realities. This single act is the genesis of the Multiverse Saga, setting the stage for the return of Kang's conqueror variants and the multiversal chaos seen in subsequent films and series. The carefully managed prison of a single timeline was broken, and the madness of the multiverse was unleashed upon an unprepared MCU.

The Multiverse Saga is meticulously structured across three phases, each escalating the stakes and deepening the cosmic lore.

Phase Four: Foundations of Chaos (2021-2022)

Phase Four served as an extended prologue, introducing the core concepts and emotional fallout that define the saga. It was less about a central plot and more about planting narrative seeds.

  • WandaVision (2021): While not directly multiversal, this series was crucial for introducing the Darkhold, a tome of dark magic that granted its user knowledge from across the multiverse. It chronicled Wanda Maximoff's transformation into the Scarlet Witch, a Nexus Being whose power would become a key multiversal force. The post-credits scene showed her studying the Darkhold and hearing the voices of her lost children from another reality, setting up her future motivations.
  • Loki Season 1 (2021): The absolute cornerstone of the saga. It defined Variants, the Sacred Timeline, and the TVA. Its climax—Sylvie killing He Who Remains—is the inciting incident for the entire saga, breaking the timeline and re-introducing Kang the Conqueror as the overarching threat.
  • What If…? (2021): This animated series provided audiences with their first extensive tour of the newly unleashed multiverse. It showcased the endless possibilities of alternate timelines and introduced powerful variants like Captain Carter, Doctor Strange Supreme, and the universe-devouring Infinity Ultron. The Watcher, a cosmic observer of the multiverse, was established as a key figure.
  • Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021): This film demonstrated the immediate, tangible consequences of a broken multiverse. A botched spell by Doctor Strange and Peter Parker pulled villains (and heroes) from other cinematic universes (the Sam Raimi and Marc Webb Spider-Man film series) into the main MCU reality (designated Earth-199999 or Earth-616 by its inhabitants). It established that different cinematic franchises were now officially part of the larger MCU multiverse.
  • Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022): This film directly explored the horror of the multiverse. It introduced Dreamwalking (a way to possess one's variants in other universes via the Darkhold) and, most critically, the concept of Incursions—the catastrophic collision and destruction of two universes. The film featured the Illuminati of Earth-838, who were wiped out by the Scarlet Witch, demonstrating the immense danger posed by powerful, universe-hopping beings. It also introduced America Chavez, a hero with the unique ability to travel the multiverse.

Phase Five: The Kang Dynasty Rises (2023-2025)

Phase Five focuses on the direct confrontation with Kang and his variants, moving the multiversal threat from a background concept to a clear and present danger.

  • Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (2023): This film formally introduced the saga's main antagonist: Kang the Conqueror. This variant was revealed to have been exiled to the Quantum Realm by his other selves, who feared his destructive nature. The film's mid-credits scene was a major turning point, revealing the Council of Kangs, a vast assembly of Kang variants from across the multiverse, led by Immortus, Rama-Tut, and a Centurion variant. Their goal is to stop the heroes of the MCU's Earth-616, whom they see as a threat to their control over the multiverse. The post-credits scene introduced another key variant, the inventor Victor Timely, setting up Loki Season 2.
  • Loki Season 2 (2023): This season dealt with the immediate fallout of the timeline's destruction, as the TVA struggled to cope with infinite branches and the threat of a total temporal meltdown. It deepened the lore of He Who Remains and introduced Victor Timely as a pivotal figure in the creation of the TVA's technology. The season's climax saw Loki achieve god-like control over time, transforming himself into the living anchor of the multiverse, weaving the disparate timelines into a new, tree-like structure, effectively replacing He Who Remains as its guardian. This act stabilized the multiverse but did not eliminate the threat of the Council of Kangs.

Phase Six: The Secret Wars Climax (2025-Beyond)

Phase Six is designed to be the epic conclusion, bringing all the saga's threads together in a massive, universe-altering finale.

  • Avengers: The Kang Dynasty (Planned): This film is expected to feature the first major confrontation between Earth's heroes and the full might of the Council of Kangs. Drawing its title from a 2001 comic storyline by Kurt Busiek, the plot will likely involve Kang's forces launching a full-scale invasion of Earth-616, aiming to conquer it as the “crown jewel” of the multiverse.1)
  • Avengers: Secret Wars (Planned): This is the ultimate endgame of the saga. Based on the 2015 comic event, this film is expected to depict the culmination of the Incursions, leading to the total collapse of the multiverse and the creation of a “Battleworld” composed of remnant realities. This event will likely feature an unprecedented number of characters from across the MCU's history and potentially from other Marvel film franchises, all fighting for the survival and potential rebirth of the cosmos.

Aftermath (Speculative)

The conclusion of Secret Wars is widely theorized to serve as a soft reboot for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Just as the comic event ended with the restoration of the multiverse and subtle but significant changes to the Earth-616 timeline, the film could be used to streamline the MCU's continuity. This could allow Marvel Studios to selectively retain popular characters while recasting others, introduce new elements like the x-men and fantastic_four more organically into the main universe, and set a new status quo for the next multi-year saga.

  • Loki Laufeyson: Arguably the central protagonist of the saga. His journey from a captured variant to the god-like guardian of the multiverse is the narrative's backbone. He is the character with the deepest understanding of the TVA, Kang, and the mechanics of time.
  • Doctor Stephen Strange: As a Master of the Mystic Arts and former Sorcerer Supreme, Strange is on the front lines of the multiversal incursions. His direct experiences with alternate realities, dreamwalking, and the Darkhold make him one of the few heroes equipped to understand the magical and existential threats.
  • Wanda Maximoff / The Scarlet Witch: Initially an antagonist in Multiverse of Madness, her immense power as a Nexus Being makes her one of the most significant players. Her ability to rewrite reality and her corruption by the Darkhold demonstrate the personal, emotional dangers of the multiverse.
  • Peter Parker: His experience in No Way Home gave him a deeply personal and tragic introduction to the multiverse. He was forced to confront the consequences of alternate realities bleeding into his own, ultimately making a universe-altering sacrifice.
  • Scott Lang / Ant-Man: Scott's intimate knowledge of the Quantum Realm led to the first direct, physical confrontation with Kang the Conqueror. He and his family are responsible for defeating the Exiled One and inadvertently alerting the Council of Kangs to the threat posed by Earth's heroes.
  • Kang the Conqueror and His Variants: The central villain of the saga. He is not a single person but an infinite number of variants from across the multiverse, all originating from the 31st-century scientist Nathaniel Richards.
    • He Who Remains: The “original” variant who ended the first multiversal war. He was a tired, eccentric guardian of the Sacred Timeline, not a conqueror. His death unleashed his more malevolent selves.
    • Kang the Conqueror (The Exiled One): A ruthless, powerful warrior and scientist exiled to the Quantum Realm by his peers. He was defeated by Ant-Man but represents the baseline threat level of a single, determined Kang.
    • The Council of Kangs: A seemingly infinite gathering of Kang variants led by key figures like Immortus (the apparent leader), Rama-Tut (an Egyptian pharaoh variant), and a Scarlet Centurion-esque variant. They see themselves as the secret rulers of the multiverse and view Earth-616's heroes as an existential threat to their power.
    • Victor Timely: A brilliant but unassuming inventor in the early 20th century. He is a younger, unsuspecting Kang variant manipulated by Ravonna Renslayer and Loki, whose genius is pivotal to the creation of the TVA's technology.
  • Time Variance Authority (TVA): A vast, timeless bureaucracy created by He Who Remains to police the Sacred Timeline. After the timeline's destruction, the TVA is in a state of crisis, struggling to adapt to a new mission of monitoring the multiverse's branches under the guidance of Mobius M. Mobius and Hunter B-15.
  • The Illuminati (Earth-838): A secret council of Earth-838's most powerful heroes, including Captain Carter, Captain Marvel (Maria Rambeau), Black Bolt, Mister Fantastic, and Professor X. Their existence proved that powerful, organized hero teams exist across the multiverse. Their swift and brutal defeat at the hands of the Scarlet Witch served as a stark warning about the scale of multiversal threats.

As established in Loki, a Variant is any individual who deviates from their prescribed path on the timeline, creating a divergent branch reality. These variants can be nearly identical to their “sacred” counterparts (like the Loki captured after the Battle of New York) or wildly different (like Alligator Loki). The existence of infinite variants for every single being is the foundational principle of the multiverse. A divergence or “Nexus Event” is the moment of choice that creates a new branch timeline. The TVA's original purpose was to erase these branches before they could mature.

Introduced in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, an Incursion is a catastrophic event where two universes collide, resulting in the annihilation of one or both. In the MCU, it's explained that the footprint of a being from one universe in another is small, but a prolonged or significant presence can trigger this universal collapse. The Illuminati of Earth-838 executed their Doctor Strange after he caused an incursion by using the Darkhold. This concept is lifted directly from Hickman's comics and is the ultimate physical threat of the saga, promising the destruction of all reality.

This is a critical distinction. For eons, there was only the Sacred Timeline. It wasn't the “only” timeline possible, but rather a carefully curated collection of timelines flowing in the same direction, all pruned of any significant deviation by the TVA. Its purpose was to prevent the birth of new Kang variants. The Multiverse is the natural state of reality: an infinite, chaotic web of branching timelines. When Sylvie killed He Who Remains, she didn't create the multiverse; she restored it by destroying the dam that was holding it back. Loki's final transformation stabilizes this chaotic structure into a functional, living multiverse, but the dangers within it remain.

The Darkhold, also known as the Book of the Damned, contains powerful dark magic. One of its most dangerous abilities is Dreamwalking. This allows a sorcerer to project their consciousness across the multiverse and possess the body of one of their variants in another universe. The Scarlet Witch used this power to devastating effect, puppeteering her Earth-838 variant to hunt down America Chavez. The act of using the Darkhold, however, leaves a corrupting stain on the user and the fabric of reality itself, making it a high-risk, high-reward multiversal tool. All known copies of the Darkhold were destroyed at the end of Multiverse of Madness.

This is the single most important source of inspiration for the Multiverse Saga's endgame. Hickman's multi-year run on Avengers and New Avengers introduced and popularized the concept of Incursions. Key elements that the MCU is clearly adapting include:

  • The multiversal collapse caused by Incursions.
  • The moral compromises heroes must make when faced with an unsolvable, existential threat.
  • The existence of a council of multiversal beings (the Council of Reeds in the comics, the Council of Kangs in the MCU).
  • The creation of Battleworld, a patchwork planet made from the remnants of dead universes.
  • The rise of a single, all-powerful figure who rules this new reality (God-Emperor Doom in the comics, with Kang or another figure expected to fill this role in the MCU).

While the MCU's TVA is a formidable, all-knowing organization, its comic book counterpart is often depicted as a more mundane, faceless bureaucracy of chrono-monitors. Created by Walt Simonson and Sal Buscema in a Thor comic, they were often portrayed as ineffective and were not tied directly to Kang. The MCU elevated the TVA's importance exponentially, linking its origin directly to Kang and making it a central pillar of the saga. Similarly, while Kang the Conqueror has always been a major Avengers villain in the comics, the concept of a “Council of Kangs” and the focus on his variants as a collective threat is a specific pull from various comic storylines, most notably from the Avengers Forever limited series.

The comic storyline Spider-Verse, written by Dan Slott, was a massive crossover event that saw Spider-Men, Women, and creatures from hundreds of different universes team up to fight a family of vampiric villains called the Inheritors who were hunting them across realities. While Spider-Man: No Way Home did not adapt this plot, its core emotional and visual concept—bringing multiple Spider-Man variants together—is a direct homage to the popularity and success of this comic event and its animated film adaptations, proving the mainstream appeal of multiversal team-ups.


1)
Following legal issues surrounding actor Jonathan Majors, the film's title and exact plot direction are reportedly under reconsideration by Marvel Studios. However, the core concept of a massive conflict against a council of multiversal villains remains the expected trajectory.
2)
The name “The Multiverse Saga” is an out-of-universe production title, unlike “The Infinity Saga” which aligns with the in-universe name for the Infinity Stones. Characters within the MCU have not referred to the current events by this name.
3)
Kevin Feige has referred to Kang as a new type of “big bad” for the MCU, one that is an “infinite number of characters” and presents a “different kind of villain” that the heroes are not prepared for.
4)
The version of Earth in the main MCU timeline was referred to as “Earth-616” by Mysterio's team in Spider-Man: Far From Home as a deception. However, it was later used officially by characters from other universes, like Jane Foster and the Illuminati of Earth-838, confirming it as the designation for the prime MCU reality. This is a nod to the prime Marvel Comics universe's designation.
5)
The visual of the timelines branching wildly at the end of Loki Season 1 is a direct visual representation of the cover of Secret Wars #1 (2015), which shows the different Earths of the multiverse.
6)
The concept of a “Nexus Being” like the Scarlet Witch comes from the comics. Nexus Beings are rare individual entities with the power to affect probability and the future, acting as the anchor of their respective reality. There is only one Nexus Being per reality in the multiverse.
7)
The three giant statues at the Citadel at the End of Time in Loki are speculated to represent the three Time-Keepers as they were meant to be seen by the TVA, but with the central statue's face broken off, possibly by He Who Remains after he took control.