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. ====== Oblivion ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: **Oblivion is one of the foundational cosmic abstract entities of the Marvel Universe, representing the primordial, absolute concept of non-existence and the ultimate void into which all things must eventually pass.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** As one of the four cardinal "Cosmic Compass" entities, alongside [[eternity|Eternity]], [[infinity_entity|Infinity]], and [[death|Death]], Oblivion embodies a fundamental pillar of reality. While Eternity represents all that //is//, Oblivion represents all that //is not//, forming a necessary cosmic duality. * **Primary Impact:** Oblivion rarely acts directly, preferring to influence events through its avatars and agents, such as [[maelstrom|Maelstrom]]. Its primary goal is the cessation of all existence, not out of malice, but because that is its fundamental nature—to expand its own state of nothingness until it encompasses everything. * **Key Incarnations:** Oblivion is a concept almost entirely exclusive to the [[earth_616|Earth-616]] comics continuity. The [[marvel_cinematic_universe|Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)]] has not introduced the personified entity of Oblivion, instead exploring the concept of "the void" through different narrative lenses, such as the location at the End of Time in the //[[loki_series|Loki]]// series or the destructive potential of the Dark Dimension. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Oblivion made its first, ominous appearance in **//Iceman// #3**, published in March 1985. The character was co-created by writer **J. M. DeMatteis** and artist **Alan Kupperberg**. Its introduction came during a period in Marvel Comics where the cosmic landscape was being significantly deepened and defined. Building upon the groundwork laid by creators like Jack Kirby and Steve Englehart with entities such as [[eternity|Eternity]] and [[galactus|Galactus]], DeMatteis sought to create a conceptual counterpart to existence itself. The choice to introduce such a profound entity in the solo series of a character like [[iceman|Iceman]] was unconventional. However, the story, which involved Oblivion's daughter Mirage, allowed DeMatteis to explore themes of identity, purpose, and the fear of nothingness on a personal scale before expanding Oblivion's role in the wider cosmic hierarchy. Oblivion's definitive place as one of the four corners of the "Cosmic Compass" was later solidified in the pages of **//[[quasar|Quasar]]//**, a series by writer Mark Gruenwald that became the quintessential exploration of Marvel's cosmic characters and concepts in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It was here that Oblivion's relationship with Death, Eternity, and Infinity was fully articulated, cementing it as a primal force of the universe. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of a being like Oblivion is, by definition, an esoteric and paradoxical concept. As the embodiment of non-existence, it did not have a "birth" in the conventional sense. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === In the prime Marvel continuity, Oblivion is understood to have "come into being" at the same moment as its conceptual opposites, Eternity and Infinity, and its sibling, Death. These four entities form the Cosmic Compass, representing the foundational pillars of the universe. * **The First Firmament:** Before the current multiverse, there was only the First Firmament, the singular, sentient first universe. When the Celestials warred against the Aspirants, their conflict fractured the First Firmament, giving rise to the second iteration of the cosmos and the birth of the multiverse. * **The Birth of Abstracts:** It was from this cosmic genesis that the primary abstract entities were born. [[eternity|Eternity]] arose as the personification of the new reality and all of existence within it. [[infinity_entity|Infinity]] embodied the infinite potential and space of this new creation. [[death|Death]] manifested as the concept of mortality and the end of life. And Oblivion, its antithesis, came to be as the personification of the void, the nothingness that existed before creation and the ultimate state of non-existence to which all things would return. Oblivion does not reside within the universe proper. Its domain is the **Outer Void**, also known as the Realm of Oblivion, a dimension of absolute nothingness that surrounds the multiverse. From this vantage point, it patiently waits for all of existence to run its course and return to the state of tranquil non-being that it represents. Its desire for the end of everything is not an act of villainy but the simple expression of its core function, as immutable as gravity. To achieve its aims without directly interfering, which could upset the cosmic balance and draw the ire of entities like the [[living_tribunal|Living Tribunal]], Oblivion empowers avatars to act on its behalf within the material plane. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === **Oblivion, as a personified cosmic entity, has not appeared and has not been mentioned in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.** The MCU has introduced high-level cosmic beings, such as [[celestials|The Celestials]], [[eternity|Eternity]] (in //[[thor_love_and_thunder|Thor: Love and Thunder]]//), The Watcher (in //[[what_if|What If...?]]//), and the [[living_tribunal|Living Tribunal]] (as a brief statue cameo in //[[doctor_strange_in_the_multiverse_of_madness|Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness]]//). However, the more conceptual abstracts like Oblivion, Infinity, and Lady Death (as a distinct entity from Hela) have yet to be adapted. Instead of a single being representing the void, the MCU has explored the concept through various phenomena and locations: * **The Void at the End of Time:** As seen in the //[[loki_series|Loki]]// Disney+ series, the Void is a dumping ground dimension at the end of time where the [[time_variance_authority|Time Variance Authority (TVA)]] sends all "pruned" variants and timelines. This desolate wasteland is consumed by a sentient, cloud-like temporal creature named Alioth. While Alioth's function of consuming matter and energy to erase it from existence is thematically similar to Oblivion's purpose, it is a creature bound to a specific location and function within the TVA's mechanics, not a fundamental cosmic constant. * **The Dark Dimension:** Ruled by [[dormammu|Dormammu]], the Dark Dimension is a realm where time does not exist, and its primary characteristic is the desire to absorb other realities into itself. This expansionist, all-consuming nature mirrors Oblivion's goal. However, Dormammu's ambition is driven by a lust for power and conquest, a form of malice entirely absent from Oblivion's detached, philosophical nature. * **The Quantum Realm:** While primarily a dimension of infinite possibility, the deepest levels of the Quantum Realm, as shown in //[[ant-man_and_the_wasp_quantumania|Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania]]//, are depicted as a desolate, empty space, a subatomic void. This represents a scientific, rather than metaphysical, interpretation of nothingness. The likely reason for the MCU's avoidance of Oblivion is its sheer abstractness. Portraying a character whose goal is simply "nothing" in a compelling cinematic way is a significant narrative challenge. The MCU prefers to ground its cosmic threats in more relatable motivations, like Thanos's misguided utilitarianism or Dormammu's hunger for power. ===== Part 3: Nature, Powers & Realm ===== As an abstract entity, Oblivion's "powers" are better understood as inherent aspects of its being. It does not "use" power so much as it //is// power—the power of non-existence. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Oblivion's standing in the cosmic hierarchy is near the absolute top, surpassed only by the Living Tribunal, multi-versal beings like the Beyonders, and the one-above-all|One-Above-All. * **Fundamental Nature:** Oblivion is the embodiment of the state of non-existence. It is the silence between notes, the void between stars, and the ultimate end that predates and will postdate all of creation. It is not evil; it is a necessary part of the cosmic balance, providing the conceptual "space" for existence to occur. * **Powers and Abilities:** * **Nigh-Omnipotence:** Within its own realm, the Outer Void, Oblivion is truly omnipotent. Its power over nothingness is absolute. Outside its realm, its influence is nearly as vast, though it is bound by the multiversal laws established by the Living Tribunal. * **Manipulation of Non-Existence:** Its primary ability is control over nothingness. It can erase matter, energy, souls, and even entire concepts from reality, effectively consigning them to utter non-being. This is a power far more profound than simple destruction. * **Cosmic Awareness:** Oblivion is nigh-omniscient, possessing a consciousness that spans the entirety of the multiverse. It is aware of virtually all events, past, present, and future, particularly as they relate to the grand cosmic cycle of existence and non-existence. * **Reality and Conceptual Warping:** As a being that exists outside the conventional laws of physics, Oblivion can manipulate reality on a multiversal scale. It can alter fundamental constants and erase concepts from the collective consciousness. * **Creation of Avatars:** Oblivion's most common method of interaction with the material universe is through the creation and empowerment of avatars. These beings act as its agents, carrying out its will. By using proxies, Oblivion can influence events without directly violating the cosmic accords that govern the actions of the great abstract powers. Notable avatars include: * **Maelstrom:** An Inhuman/Deviant hybrid who became obsessed with the concept of nothingness. Oblivion granted him phenomenal cosmic power, turning him into his primary agent of universal annihilation. * **Mirage:** Oblivion's "daughter," created to act as a lure and a gateway to draw all of existence into the Outer Void. * **Deathurge:** A wraith-like being who served as Oblivion's herald, tasked with guiding powerful beings who sought suicide to their final end, ensuring their essence returned to nothingness. * **The Chaos King (Amatsu-Mikaboshi):** While originally a Japanese god of evil, his backstory was retconned to reveal him as an aspect of the primordial void that existed even before the First Firmament and the current iteration of Oblivion. During the //[[chaos_war]]// event, he sought to return the multiverse to this state of pre-creation nothingness. * **The Outer Void:** Oblivion's realm is a vast, featureless expanse of pure nothingness that exists outside the confines of the multiverse itself. It is the ultimate endpoint of all things. Time, space, and the laws of physics as understood within the universe are meaningless here. For any being not native to it, to enter the Outer Void is to face complete and total erasure of one's very being. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === As Oblivion does not exist in the MCU, a direct comparison of powers is impossible. However, we can analyze how the //concept// of oblivion is treated in terms of power and threat. * **The Snap (Infinity Gauntlet):** The act of erasing half of all life, as performed by [[thanos|Thanos]], is the closest the MCU has come to a large-scale application of "oblivion." However, the Snap did not destroy souls or erase beings from ever having existed; it turned them to dust, and crucially, they could be brought back. This is fundamentally different from the absolute erasure Oblivion represents. * **Alioth's Power:** The creature Alioth from //Loki// consumes matter, energy, and spacetime, effectively erasing it from the timeline. This power is a direct parallel to one of Oblivion's core functions. However, Alioth's power seems limited to its immediate vicinity within the Void and can be overcome through enchantment, suggesting it is a powerful entity but not an absolute, conceptual force on the same level as the comic version of Oblivion. * **Dark Dimension's Consumption:** Dormammu's ability to absorb universes into his own timeless dimension is a form of oblivion for those realities. He effectively overwrites their existence with his own. This is an active, conquering form of oblivion, contrasted with the comics' passive, inevitable version. The power can be thwarted through logic and temporal paradoxes (as Doctor Strange demonstrated), which would be meaningless against the true Oblivion. In summary, the MCU treats "oblivion" as a destructive force or a dangerous location—a //threat to be overcome//. In the comics, Oblivion is an inescapable cosmic //principle//, which is a far more profound and terrifying concept. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== Oblivion's relationships are not based on friendship or enmity but on cosmic function and balance. It interacts with other abstracts as counterparts in a multiversal equation. ==== The Cosmic Compass and Abstract Pantheon ==== The most significant relationships Oblivion has are with the other three cardinal points of the Cosmic Compass. * **[[eternity|Eternity]]:** Eternity is Oblivion's direct opposite and "brother." Eternity is the sum total of all life and existence in the universe. Where Eternity is //everything//, Oblivion is //nothing//. They are in a perpetual, silent struggle, but it is a symbiotic one. Without the void of Oblivion, the "canvas" of Eternity could not exist. Their balance is what defines reality. * **[[death|Death]]:** Death is Oblivion's "sister" and closest conceptual ally. However, a critical distinction exists between them. Death governs the //end of life//, the transition from being to not-being. Oblivion represents the //state// of not-being itself. Death is the process; Oblivion is the destination. While they are aligned, Oblivion sees Death's work as merely a step towards the ultimate goal of total non-existence. During the //Thanos Imperative//, when a universe without Death (the Cancerverse) emerged, it was a horrifying perversion that both entities found abhorrent. * **[[infinity_entity|Infinity]]:** The "sister" of Eternity, Infinity represents the boundless potential and expansion of space and existence. It is the counterpart to Death. Oblivion's relationship with Infinity is one of opposition; as existence expands, Oblivion's domain conceptually shrinks, even though its ultimate victory is assured by entropy. * **[[living_tribunal|The Living Tribunal]]:** The ultimate arbiter of the multiverse, the Living Tribunal exists to preserve the cosmic balance. It ensures that no single abstract entity, including Oblivion, can prematurely dominate the others. Oblivion respects the Tribunal's authority, as its purpose is to let existence play out naturally, not to cheat and force an early end. ==== Avatars and Agents ==== Oblivion's primary antagonists are the heroes who oppose its avatars' schemes. Its "enemies" are, by extension, all who champion existence. * **[[maelstrom|Maelstrom]]:** Maelstrom is Oblivion's most infamous and powerful avatar. Granted immense power by Oblivion, Maelstrom became a universal-level threat. He sought to create a black hole massive enough to collapse the entire universe back into the singularity it came from, an act that would have been a monumental victory for his master. He was primarily opposed by the hero **[[quasar|Quasar (Wendell Vaughn)]]**, the Protector of the Universe, making Quasar one of the few mortal heroes to directly and repeatedly confront a proxy of Oblivion. * **The Sentry and The Void (Clarification):** A common point of confusion among fans is the relationship between Oblivion and **The Void**, the dark alter-ego of the hero [[sentry|The Sentry]]. **They are completely separate and unrelated entities.** The Void is a personal demon, a psychological manifestation of the Sentry's repressed negative aspects given terrifying physical form. While its name and destructive tendencies are similar, its origins are psychological and chemical, not cosmic and conceptual. Oblivion is a fundamental force of the universe; The Void is the dark side of one man's soul. ==== Affiliations ==== Oblivion's only "affiliation" is with the **Cosmic Pantheon** or **Abstract Entities**, the group of conceptual beings that embody the universe's core principles. This includes the Cosmic Compass, as well as lesser (but still vastly powerful) entities like Lord Chaos, Master Order, The In-Betweener, Love, and Hate. They occasionally gather to discuss matters of multiversal importance or to act in concert against threats that endanger the entire cosmic structure, such as the coming of the Beyonders in the lead-up to //Secret Wars// (2015). ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== Oblivion's direct appearances are rare, but the events orchestrated by its avatars have had universe-shaking consequences. === Iceman (1984 Miniseries) === In its debut storyline, Oblivion targeted [[iceman|Iceman]] through its daughter, **Mirage**. It perceived Iceman's powers over moisture and temperature, which are linked to entropy and the eventual heat death of the universe, as a potential gateway. Mirage, torn between her love for Iceman and her duty to her father, was used as a pawn in Oblivion's scheme to turn Iceman into a vessel that would freeze the universe, accelerating its return to the void. The story established Oblivion's detached, patient nature and its method of using proxies to achieve its goals. Iceman ultimately rejected this dark destiny, affirming the value of life and existence. === Quasar: The Cosmos in Collision (Quasar #19-25) === This is arguably the definitive Oblivion-centric storyline. Its avatar, **Maelstrom**, having attained cosmic awareness, goes on a rampage across the universe. He successfully murders Quasar and even the entity Infinity. Maelstrom then confronts Oblivion in the Outer Void, where Oblivion reveals its grand plan: Maelstrom's purpose was to create a cosmic vortex to collapse the universe. However, Quasar is resurrected by Infinity and, with the help of other cosmic beings, confronts Maelstrom at the end of time. The story culminates in Quasar managing to defeat Maelstrom not with force, but by showing him the ultimate futility of his actions. It's a deep, philosophical exploration of Oblivion's nature and its place in the cosmic order. === Chaos War (2010-2011) === The //Chaos War// event introduced a fascinating wrinkle into the nature of the void. The main antagonist, the **Chaos King (Amatsu-Mikaboshi)**, was revealed to be the personification of the primordial nothingness that existed //before// the current multiverse. He represented a more ancient and absolute oblivion than Oblivion itself, a state of pure, chaotic non-being that preceded the ordered structure of the current abstracts. The Chaos King sought to "reclaim" all of reality, destroying not just the universe but the realms of all gods and even abstract entities like Death. In this conflict, Oblivion was paradoxically on the side of existence, as the Chaos King's victory would have erased Oblivion as well, replacing the "ordered" non-existence it represents with a formless, chaotic void. The event highlighted that even within the concept of "nothing," there are hierarchies and distinctions. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== As a multiversal constant, Oblivion does not have "variants" in the same way as a mortal character like Loki or Spider-Man. Its form and function are generally consistent across all realities. Instead, its "variations" are best understood through its different aspects and avatars. * **Maelstrom:** Maelstrom can be seen as the "active" or "impatient" aspect of Oblivion. Where Oblivion is content to wait for eternity, Maelstrom seeks to force the end through direct, violent action. He represents the desire for nothingness given form and agency. * **Deathurge:** This avatar represents the "personal" aspect of Oblivion. It deals not with universes, but with individuals. Deathurge embodies the seductive whisper of suicide and the peaceful release of giving up the struggle of existence, guiding souls who choose their own end back to the great nothing. * **The Cancerverse (Earth-10011):** This reality provides a look at what happens when the cosmic balance is broken in the //opposite// direction. In the Cancerverse, Death was killed, and as a result, nothing could die. Life became a cancerous, immortal, and endlessly proliferating horror. This reality is a conceptual nightmare to Oblivion. Its existence is an affront to the natural order and the ultimate purpose of non-being, demonstrating why the function of both Death and Oblivion is not evil, but necessary for a healthy reality. ===== See Also ===== * [[eternity]] * [[death]] * [[infinity_entity]] * [[living_tribunal]] * [[maelstrom]] * [[quasar_wendell_vaughn]] * [[chaos_war]] * [[cosmic_entities_marvel]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((First appearance: //Iceman// #3 (1985) by J. M. DeMatteis and Alan Kupperberg.)) ((Oblivion is often referred to as a "he," but as an abstract entity, it has no true gender. It chooses masculine forms or pronouns for the convenience of lesser beings it interacts with.)) ((The distinction between Oblivion and The Void (Sentry's nemesis) is a crucial piece of lore. Writers have been careful to keep these two concepts separate to avoid diluting the cosmic significance of Oblivion.)) ((In the //Ultimates<sup>2</sup>// series by Al Ewing, the cosmic hierarchy was drastically redefined with the introduction of the Eighth Multiverse. The classic abstracts like Oblivion and Eternity were shown to be mere aspects of a far grander cosmic structure, fighting a "cosmic war of attrition" orchestrated by higher-order beings.)) ((The philosophy of Oblivion is rooted in the concept of entropy—the scientific principle that all ordered systems will inevitably move towards a state of disorder and decay. Oblivion is the metaphysical embodiment of this ultimate thermodynamic victory.)) ((Key Reading List: **Iceman (1984) #1-4**, **Quasar #19-25**, **Infinity War (1992)**, **Chaos War (2010)**, **The Thanos Imperative (2010)**.))