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. ====== Oneg the Prober ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: Oneg the Prober is a member of the enigmatic and immeasurably powerful cosmic race known as the Celestials, specifically tasked with the scientific analysis, experimentation, and data-gathering of fledgling life on countless worlds throughout the universe.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** As a Celestial, Oneg is a "space god" who participates in the grand, cosmic cycle of creation and judgment. His specific function as "The Prober" makes him the chief scientist and ethnographer of a Celestial Host, responsible for understanding a planet's evolutionary progress before judgment is passed by entities like [[arishem_the_judge]]. * **Primary Impact:** Oneg was a key participant in the genetic experiments on early humanity that resulted in the creation of two divergent offshoots: the god-like [[eternals]] and the genetically unstable [[deviants]]. His probing also directly led to the implantation of the latent "X-Gene," the genetic marker responsible for mutantkind in the [[marvel_universe]]. * **Key Incarnations:** In the Prime Comic Universe (Earth-616), Oneg is a distinct, individual member of the Celestial Hosts with a specific role. In the [[marvel_cinematic_universe]], Oneg the Prober has not appeared; his function of planetary analysis and oversight has been largely consolidated into the role of the Prime Celestial, Arishem the Judge, who communicates directly with the Eternals and monitors Earth's progress towards the Emergence. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Oneg the Prober first appeared in **''The Eternals'' #9**, published in March 1977. He was created by the legendary writer and artist **Jack "The King" Kirby**, the visionary co-creator of a vast portion of the Marvel Universe. Oneg's creation was part of Kirby's monumental return to Marvel Comics in the mid-1970s, a period defined by his boundless cosmic imagination. After his groundbreaking "Fourth World" saga at DC Comics, Kirby brought a similar thematic depth and visual grandeur to Marvel with ''The Eternals''. The series was heavily influenced by Erich von Däniken's "ancient astronauts" theories, which posited that extraterrestrial beings had visited ancient Earth and were mistaken for gods. The Celestials, including Oneg, were Kirby's ultimate expression of this concept: silent, colossal, and utterly inscrutable beings whose technology was indistinguishable from magic and whose motives were beyond mortal comprehension. Oneg's design is classic Kirby: a massive, armored humanoid figure whose form hints at a purpose rather than a personality. His title, "The Prober," immediately establishes his role as a cosmic scientist, a being of inquiry rather than immediate judgment or destruction. He, along with his Celestial brethren, represented a new scale of power in the Marvel Universe, dwarfing even cosmic entities like [[galactus]] and serving as the mysterious architects of humanity's deepest origins. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of a being as ancient as a Celestial is shrouded in cosmic myth and has been subject to various retcons over the decades. However, the core narrative of Oneg's purpose and actions has remained consistent. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Oneg's origins are tied to the very dawn of the Marvel multiverse. The Celestials were created by the First Firmament, the first iteration of reality, to be its servants. However, a faction of these servants desired to create their own life that could evolve and change, a concept anathema to the static perfection of their creator. This led to a catastrophic civil war that shattered the first universe and gave birth to the second, and with it, the concept of a multiverse. The rebel Celestials, including Oneg, became the "gardeners" of this new reality. Millions of years ago, Oneg accompanied the First Host of Celestials to a primitive planet Earth. While others like [[gammenon_the_gatherer]] collected life samples, Oneg's task was to analyze and experiment. He took the nascent hominids of the era and performed a series of complex genetic manipulations. This tripartite experiment resulted in three distinct lineages: * **The Eternals:** Genetically stable, immortal beings with the ability to channel cosmic energy, created to be the protectors of Earth. * **The Deviants:** Genetically unstable beings with a mutable DNA structure, resulting in monstrous forms and a chaotic society. They were a failed aspect of the experiment, intended to accelerate evolution but resulting in instability. * **Baseline Humanity:** The vast majority of early humans were also manipulated. Oneg implanted a latent genetic complex in their DNA—the "X-Gene"—which would allow for benevolent mutations to arise over millennia, granting superhuman abilities and ensuring humanity's potential for survival and growth. This act makes Oneg the ultimate architect of mutantkind. Oneg returned with the Second, Third, and most notably, the Fourth Host. During the Fourth Host's arrival to pass judgment on humanity's worthiness, Oneg's role was paramount. He spent the 50-year judgment period silently observing and gathering data on humanity's progress, culture, and genetic potential. His findings, along with those of [[ziran_the_tester]], would be presented to [[arishem_the_judge]] for the final verdict. It was during this time that he, along with the other Celestials, effortlessly withstood an assault from Odin and the [[asgardians]], demonstrating their overwhelming power. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === **Oneg the Prober has not yet been introduced by name or specific function in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU).** The MCU's adaptation of the Celestials, primarily detailed in the film ''Eternals'' (2021), significantly simplifies their hierarchy and consolidates many of their roles. In the MCU, the Celestials are depicted as the universe's first and most powerful life forms, responsible for creating stars, planets, and galaxies. Their core purpose is to perpetuate their own species through a process called "The Emergence." They seed promising worlds with a Celestial "egg" deep within the planetary core. To provide the necessary life energy for the new Celestial to emerge, they create the Eternals—synthetic, programmed beings—to protect the planet's dominant intelligent life from the Deviants, who were an earlier, failed creation intended to clear out apex predators. The role that Oneg the Prober fills in the comics is effectively performed by the Prime Celestial, **[[arishem_the_judge|Arishem]]**, in the MCU. Arishem is not merely a judge; he is the creator of the Eternals, their direct commander, and the being who monitors the progress of seeded worlds. He communicates with the Eternals (specifically the Prime Eternal, like Ajak) via a psychic link, gathering data on the host population's growth. This constant monitoring and data collection is the MCU's narrative equivalent of the "probing" conducted by Oneg in the comics. Therefore, while fans may ask "Where is Oneg the Prober in the MCU?", the most accurate answer is that his character's function—planetary analysis and experimentation—has been absorbed into the more centralized and singular figure of Arishem for the sake of a more streamlined cinematic narrative. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Physiology & Function ===== The abilities of a Celestial are so vast they border on omnipotence, operating on a scale that defies mortal physics and understanding. Oneg, as a fully-fledged Celestial, possesses the entirety of this power, though his focus is on analysis rather than combat. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === A Celestial's physical form is merely a vessel, an armor of unknown composition that contains their true, purely energetic nature. This armor is incredibly durable, capable of withstanding planetary destruction, attacks from Skyfather-level beings like Odin, and even direct hits from multiple [[norn_stones]] without any visible damage. * **Powers and Abilities:** * **Cosmic Energy Manipulation:** Oneg can generate and manipulate cosmic energy on an unimaginable scale. He can project beams capable of atomizing entire mountains or restructure matter at a subatomic level. * **Matter & Reality Manipulation:** Oneg possesses the ability to create, transmute, and manipulate matter and energy. This was the core power used in his genetic experiments on early humanity, allowing him to rewrite DNA and create new forms of life from existing stock. * **Size Alteration:** Like all Celestials, Oneg typically appears as a 2,000-foot-tall humanoid, but he can alter his size and mass at will, from microscopic to star-sized. * **Telepathy and Cosmic Awareness:** Oneg possesses psionic abilities on a galactic scale. He can read the minds of any being, scan the entire collective consciousness of a species, and perceive events across time and space. His "probing" is a hyper-advanced form of this, allowing him to analyze a planet's entire biological, geological, and social history in an instant. * **Immortality & Nigh-Invulnerability:** Celestials are functionally immortal and do not age. They are immune to conventional diseases and forms of injury. Destroying a Celestial's armor is a feat that typically requires reality-altering weapons or the combined power of multiple cosmic entities. * **Hyper-Intelligence:** Oneg's intellect is as vast as his power. He is a master geneticist, physicist, and sociologist on a cosmic scale, possessing knowledge gathered over billions of years from millions of worlds. * **Function and Equipment:** * Oneg's specific function is **analysis**. He is the scientist of the group. While others gather, test, or exterminate, Oneg's purpose is to understand. His "probing" involves deep scans of a planet's biosphere, noosphere (the sphere of human thought), and genetic makeup. His unique, helmeted design is believed to house sophisticated sensory equipment that allows him to perceive data across every spectrum of reality. The findings from his probings are a critical component of the Celestials' final judgment on a species. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === As Oneg does not appear, this analysis applies to the Celestials shown in the MCU, such as Arishem, Tiamut, and the deceased Celestial head that became the mining colony of [[knowhere]]. * **Demonstrated Powers:** * **Vast Power & Scale:** The MCU maintains the Celestials' immense size and power. Arishem is shown to be larger than a planet, capable of effortlessly teleporting the Eternals across interstellar distances and manipulating planetary matter. The birth of Tiamut from Earth's core was an extinction-level event. * **Creation:** Arishem is explicitly shown creating a miniature sun in the palm of his hand to demonstrate his power. He is credited with creating the Eternals, the Deviants, and entire galaxies. This creative power is a central tenet of their MCU depiction. * **Energy Projection:** Celestials can project powerful energy beams, as seen when the nascent Tiamut begins to emerge. * **Telepathic Communication:** Arishem communicates with the Eternals through a non-verbal, psychic link, embedding his will and memories directly into their minds. * **Vulnerability:** The MCU introduces a more concrete vulnerability for the Celestials: the Uni-Mind. The Eternals, by combining their cosmic energy into a single consciousness, were able to generate enough power to influence a Celestial's actions, with Sersi ultimately using this power to transmute the emerging Tiamut into inert marble, killing him. This presents a more achievable method of defeating a Celestial than is typically seen in the comics. The primary difference is one of focus. In the comics, the Celestials' power is used for a broad, often inscrutable purpose of cosmic gardening and judgment. In the MCU, their immense power is focused almost exclusively on a single, biological imperative: self-reproduction via the Emergence. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== As a being who operates on a cosmic scale over millions of years, Oneg's relationships are not personal friendships or rivalries in the human sense. They are functional, based on shared purpose and cosmic hierarchy. ==== Fellow Celestials of Note ==== Oneg's primary "allies" are the other members of the Celestial Hosts he serves with. Each has a specific, complementary function. * **[[arishem_the_judge]]**: The leader of the Celestial Hosts that visit Earth and the one who passes the final judgment. Oneg's analytical data is submitted directly to Arishem, whose decision to spare or destroy a world is heavily influenced by the Prober's findings. They are the chief scientist and the chief justice of the cosmic court. * **[[exitar_the_exterminator]]**: A colossal Celestial even larger than his brethren, Exitar is the executioner. If Arishem's judgment is negative, Exitar is summoned to "purify" the planet, completely eradicating all life. Oneg's work determines whether Exitar is called upon. * **[[ziran_the_tester]]**: Ziran's function is to test the stability and worthiness of a planet's life forms through various cosmic trials. His work complements Oneg's; while Oneg passively analyzes what //is//, Ziran actively creates scenarios to test what a species //can be//. * **[[tiamut_the_communicator]] (The Dreaming Celestial)**: Tiamut was the Celestial tasked with alerting the Host to the results of their judgment. During the Second Host, he was betrayed by a fellow Celestial and sealed in a dormant state beneath the Earth's crust (in what would become the Diablo Mountains in California). His awakening was a major event, and he shares a deep connection to Earth's fate, similar to Oneg's role as one of its architects. ==== Cosmic Adversaries ==== Celestials rarely have personal enemies, but they have faced opposition from other cosmic powers who disagree with their methods or see them as a threat. * **The Horde:** The ultimate cosmic locusts, the Horde are the dark counterpart to the Celestials. They are a plague of cosmic insects that serve a being known as the Fulcrum in his "opposite" aspect. Billions of years ago, the Horde infected a Celestial, turning it into the first Dark Celestial. Recently, they returned and managed to kill the entire Fourth Host, including Oneg, before resurrecting them as corrupted Dark Celestials under their control. * **The Asgardians:** During the Fourth Host's judgment of Earth, Odin, representing all of Earth's pantheons, challenged the Celestials. Donning the virtually indestructible [[destroyer_armor]] and wielding the Odinsword, he confronted them directly. The Celestials, including Oneg, effortlessly dispatched him, melting the Destroyer armor into slag and demonstrating the vast gulf in power between a Skyfather and a true "space god." * **The Beyonders:** While not a direct conflict, the Beyonders represent a philosophical and existential threat. These beings from outside the multiverse were responsible for the Incursions that nearly destroyed all of reality. Their goal of universal destruction is in direct opposition to the Celestials' goal of cosmic propagation and evolution, making them ideological arch-enemies. ==== Affiliations ==== * **[[celestials|The Celestials]]**: This is Oneg's race and primary affiliation. He has served as a member of at least four Celestial Hosts that have visited Earth over the eons. * **Creators of the [[eternals]] and [[deviants]]**: Through his genetic experiments, Oneg is the direct creator of these two offshoot races of humanity. His actions forever altered Earth's evolutionary path and set the stage for millennia of conflict and heroism. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== Oneg the Prober has been present during some of the most pivotal cosmic events in Marvel's history, always in his role as a silent observer and analyst. ==== The Fourth Host of the Celestials ==== This is Oneg's most famous and definitive storyline, running through Jack Kirby's original ''The Eternals'' series and concluding in the pages of ''Thor''. After millions of years, the Fourth Host—including Oneg, Arishem, Ziran, and others—arrived on Earth to render their final 50-year judgment. Their arrival caused global panic and drew the attention of Earth's most powerful beings. Oneg was seen across the globe, silently probing human cities, institutions, and individuals. The storyline culminated in Odin's failed attack and the intervention of Gaea, the elder goddess of Earth, who presented the "Young Gods"—twelve perfect human specimens—as proof of humanity's potential. Oneg's unspoken analysis, combined with this offering, led Arishem to judge Earth worthy of survival. ==== The Horde Invasion & The Final Host ==== In the modern era, a shocking tragedy befell the Celestials. The long-lost Horde returned, emerging from deep beneath the Earth's surface. They swarmed and infected the entire Fourth Host, killing them. Oneg was seen falling from the sky, his massive body crashing to Earth. However, this was not the end. The Horde's infection resurrected the fallen giants as twisted, corrupted **Dark Celestials**. Oneg, now a monstrous version of his former self, joined this "Final Host" in their attempt to destroy Earth. He was ultimately defeated by the combined might of the [[avengers]], who had been empowered by a Celestial embryo (the Progenitor). After their defeat, the fallen Celestials were restored and now use Avengers Mountain as their base of operations. ==== Eternals (2006 Miniseries) ==== In the acclaimed miniseries by Neil Gaiman and John Romita Jr., the Celestials, including Oneg, play a background but crucial role. The story revolves around the Eternals having their memories wiped and living as ordinary humans. The impending awakening of the Dreaming Celestial (Tiamut) acts as the catalyst for the story. Oneg and his brethren are depicted as part of the cosmic machinery that set these events in motion, with their presence felt as a constant, overwhelming force of nature. His role as the architect of their existence is reinforced, casting a long shadow over the characters as they rediscover their true, god-like identities. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== Due to their nature as fundamental forces of the universe, Celestials tend to have fewer distinct variants than street-level heroes. However, some alternate versions and interpretations exist. * **Earth X (Earth-9997):** In this reality, it's revealed that Celestials are cosmic embryos that gestate inside planets. The Celestials "seeded" Earth with an embryo and manipulated humanity's evolution (creating superpowers) to act as a planetary antibody, protecting the embryo until its birth. This re-contextualizes Oneg's "probing" as less of a scientific inquiry and more of a farmer tending to his crop. This concept was a major influence on the MCU's adaptation. * **MCU Functional Counterpart (Earth-199999):** As detailed extensively, while Oneg does not exist in the MCU, Arishem the Judge serves as his narrative and functional equivalent. Arishem's role in creating the Eternals, monitoring Earth's population, and gathering data for the Emergence directly mirrors Oneg's purpose in the comics. * **The Dark Celestials (Earth-616):** The corrupted version of Oneg that served the Horde during the Final Host event can be considered a significant, albeit temporary, "variant." This version was malevolent, destructive, and acted against the core Celestial directive of fostering potential, showcasing a terrifying inversion of his primary function. ===== See Also ===== * [[celestials]] * [[arishem_the_judge]] * [[exitar_the_exterminator]] * [[eternals]] * [[deviants]] * [[jack_kirby]] * [[knowhere]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Oneg the Prober's name is straightforward, directly referencing his function within the Celestial Host. Unlike some Celestials with more esoteric names, his title is a literal job description.)) ((His first appearance is in ''The Eternals'' #9, but his first full, unambiguous appearance is in ''The Eternals'' #10.)) ((Jack Kirby's original concept for the Celestials positioned them as cosmic "gardeners" who would cultivate life on a planet, harvest the "fruit" (the most evolved species), and then move on, a cycle that was neither good nor evil but simply a natural process on a cosmic scale.)) ((Despite their immense power, the Celestials were famously killed by the Beyonders in the lead-up to the 2015 ''Secret Wars'' event, showcasing the Beyonders' even more transcendent level of power.)) ((In the comics, the Destroyer armor that Odin used against the Fourth Host was melted by the Celestials' combined power. In the first ''Thor'' film in the MCU, the armor is depicted as being housed in Odin's Vault, suggesting it never had such a confrontation.)) ((The visual design of Oneg, particularly his featureless helmet with subtle instrumentation, has influenced the depiction of other cosmic or technologically advanced beings across science fiction.))