The Runaways
Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary
- Core Identity: The Runaways are a found family of super-powered teenagers who discover their parents are secretly a cabal of supervillains known as The Pride, forcing them to go on the run and forge their own destiny.
- Key Takeaways:
- Role in the Universe: The Runaways serve as a powerful subversion of traditional superhero tropes, focusing on themes of generational conflict, anti-authoritarianism, and the complexities of morality rather than simple good-versus-evil battles. They are a self-contained unit, deliberately existing on the fringes of the mainstream Marvel Universe, acting as protectors of the lost and disenfranchised. The Pride.
- Primary Impact: Their most significant influence is the introduction of a deeply personal, character-driven narrative that resonated with a new generation of readers. The series, created by Brian K. Vaughan and Adrian Alphona, proved that a Marvel title could achieve critical and commercial success without relying on established characters, instead focusing on the emotional reality of its young protagonists' impossible situation.
- Key Incarnations: The core difference between the comics and the live-action adaptation lies in the ultimate antagonists. In the Earth-616 comics, their parents serve ancient, world-ending giants called the Gibborim. In the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) television series, their parents' pact is with a single, manipulative alien energy being named Jonah.
Part 2: Origin and Evolution
Publication History and Creation
The Runaways first appeared in Runaways #1, published in July 2003. The series was created by writer Brian K. Vaughan and artist Adrian Alphona as one of the launch titles for Marvel's Tsunami imprint, an initiative aimed at attracting new readers, particularly those familiar with manga. Vaughan's pitch was simple and powerful: “What if one day you found out your parents were supervillains?” This high-concept premise, combined with Alphona's expressive and distinctive art style, immediately set the book apart. Initially, the series was not a massive commercial hit and was cancelled after its first 18-issue volume concluded in 2004. However, strong sales of the trade paperbacks and a vocal, passionate fan campaign convinced Marvel to relaunch the title in 2005 with the same creative team. This second volume cemented the characters' place in the Marvel Universe and ran for 30 issues before another relaunch. The Runaways' journey from a niche imprint title to a fan-favorite cornerstone of Marvel's young hero landscape is a testament to the strength of its core concept and the emotional depth of its characters.
In-Universe Origin Story
The origin of the Runaways is a story of betrayal and discovery, forcing a group of sheltered teenagers to confront the horrifying truth about the people they trust most. While the core premise remains the same across continuities, the specifics of their parents' villainy and the nature of their powers differ significantly.
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
The story, chronicled in the arc titled “Pride & Joy,” begins with six teenagers who have known each other their whole lives through their parents' annual “charity” gathering in Los Angeles. These kids—Alex Wilder, Nico Minoru, Karolina Dean, Chase Stein, Gertrude Yorkes, and Molly Hayes—have little in common and generally dislike each other. Curiosity gets the better of Alex Wilder, who leads the group to spy on their parents' meeting. Instead of a charity fundraiser, they witness a horrifying ritual in a secret chamber beneath the Wilder's home. They watch as their parents, clad in ritualistic robes, perform a magical ceremony that ends with the sacrificial murder of a young woman. This singular event shatters their reality. They learn their parents are collectively known as The Pride, a secret society that controls all criminal activity in Los Angeles. The Pride's members are:
- The Wilders (Geoffrey & Catherine): Cunning mob bosses.
- The Minorus (Robert & Tina): Dark wizards.
- The Deans (Frank & Leslie): Extraterrestrial invaders from the planet Majesdane.
- The Steins (Victor & Janet): Mad scientists and weapons designers.
- The Yorkes (Dale & Stacey): Time-travelers from the 87th century.
- The Hayeses (Gene & Alice): Telepathic mutants.
Their pact is with the Gibborim, ancient, god-like giants who were the original inhabitants of Earth. The Pride promised the Gibborim annual human sacrifices for 25 years. In exchange, the Gibborim granted them immense power and wealth, promising that upon the pact's completion, six of the thirteen Pride members would be saved to rule the new paradise created after the Gibborim destroyed the rest of humanity. Realizing they are next on the chopping block and that no other hero would believe them, the kids decide to run away. Before they flee, they raid their parents' homes, stealing key pieces of technology and magical artifacts. Nico discovers the mystical Staff of One, Chase takes the powerful Fistigon gauntlets, and they rescue Gert's genetically engineered dinosaur, Old Lace. Together, they become the Runaways, their primary goal shifting from escape to stopping their parents from fulfilling their apocalyptic pact with the Gibborim.
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
The origin story in the MCU, as depicted in the Hulu series Runaways, follows a similar inciting incident but features crucial divergences. The show takes place within the broader MCU, though its connections are subtle.1) Like their comic counterparts, the teenagers—Alex, Nico, Karolina, Chase, Gert, and Molly—have drifted apart following the death of Nico's sister, Amy. They reunite at the Wilder's home and, through a series of discoveries, find a secret passage. They witness their parents, part of an organization also called PRIDE, seemingly sacrificing a teenage girl named Destiny Gonzalez. The primary deviation is the nature of PRIDE's benefactor. Instead of the Gibborim, they serve a single, dying alien being named Jonah. Years prior, Jonah's spaceship crashed beneath Los Angeles. He saved the lives of the founding PRIDE members, granting them success and power in exchange for their loyalty and a steady stream of human sacrifices to sustain his life force. His ultimate goal is to drill deep into the Earth to free the rest of his family still trapped in the buried ship, an act that would trigger cataclysmic earthquakes across California. The motivations of the parents are also more nuanced. They are not inherently evil but are trapped in a decades-old deal made out of desperation, love for their families, and fear of Jonah. This creates a more complex, morally grey conflict. The kids' powers and equipment are also slightly altered: Molly's powers are derived from glowing rocks from Jonah's crash site rather than the X-gene, and Karolina's Majesdanian heritage is directly tied to Jonah's species. Their decision to run away is more protracted, as they spend a significant portion of the first season investigating their parents and gathering evidence before finally becoming fugitives.
Part 3: Mandate, Structure & Key Members
The Runaways defy the typical structure of a superhero team. They have no formal mandate other than survival and trying to do some good to atone for their parents' sins. They operate less like a team and more like a dysfunctional but fiercely loyal surrogate family. Leadership is often informal and fluid, initially falling to the strategic Alex Wilder before shifting to the more magically capable and emotionally mature Nico Minoru after Alex's betrayal. Their headquarters is a sunken, dilapidated mansion they dub “The Hostel.”
Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)
The powers and personalities of the founding members are distinct and are central to the team's dynamic.
- Alex Wilder
- Abilities: Alex possesses no superhuman abilities. His greatest assets are his prodigy-level intellect, natural charisma, and a deep passion for strategy and logistics, modeled after his mob-boss parents. He is a master tactician, often acting as the team's first leader.
- Character Arc: Alex is the catalyst who brings the group together to spy on their parents. However, his story is one of tragedy and betrayal. It is revealed that he was secretly loyal to his parents and The Pride all along, believing the Gibborim would spare him and the other children alongside their parents. He manipulates the Runaways, sabotages their efforts, and ultimately reveals his true allegiance in the final confrontation. He is incinerated by the Gibborim for his hubris. He has since been resurrected and remains a complicated antagonist/anti-hero figure.
- Nico Minoru (Sister Grimm)
- Abilities: Nico is a powerful sorceress who wields the Staff of One, a magical staff that emerges from her chest whenever she bleeds. The Staff can cast nearly any spell imaginable, but with a critical limitation: it can never cast the same spell twice. This forces Nico to be incredibly creative and verbally precise with her incantations (e.g., she can cast “Freeze!” once, but must later use “Cryokinesis!” or “Absolute Zero!”). Her power is innate, inherited from her dark wizard parents.
- Character Arc: Initially insecure, Nico is thrust into a leadership role after Alex's betrayal. Her journey is defined by the emotional and physical cost of her magic and the burden of responsibility. She becomes the de facto heart and soul of the team, a gothic pillar of strength who holds their found family together through countless tragedies.
- Karolina Dean (Lucy in the Sky)
- Abilities: Karolina is a Majesdanian, an alien species whose bodies absorb and manipulate solar energy. She can fly, project powerful energy blasts, and create force fields. In her natural state, her body glows with a shifting, rainbow-colored bioluminescence, which she initially suppressed with a custom-made medical alert bracelet she believed was for a metal allergy.
- Character Arc: Karolina's story is one of self-discovery. Learning she is an alien is intertwined with her coming to terms with her sexuality as a lesbian. Her journey from a seemingly perfect “valley girl” to a confident and powerful hero is a cornerstone of the series. She struggles with her alien heritage and the arranged marriage to a Skrull, Xavin, which she enters into to protect Earth.
- Chase Stein (Talkback)
- Abilities: Like Alex, Chase has no innate superhuman powers. He is the son of mad scientists and possesses a natural aptitude for technology. He pilots the team's getaway vehicle, the “Leapfrog,” and wields a pair of powerful, flame-projecting gauntlets called the Fistigons, which he stole from his parents.
- Character Arc: Initially presented as a stereotypical dumb jock, Chase reveals surprising emotional depth and loyalty. He is often the team's muscle and technician but also its most impulsive and hot-headed member. His relationship with Gertrude Yorkes is a central romance in the series, and her death profoundly affects him, leading him down a darker, more reckless path before he eventually finds his footing again as the team's “big brother.”
- Gertrude Yorkes (Arsenic)
- Abilities: Gert's powers are psionic. She shares a telepathic and empathic link with Old Lace, a genetically engineered Deinonychus from the 87th century that her time-traveling parents commissioned. Whatever Gert feels, Old Lace feels, and the dinosaur is fiercely loyal, obeying Gert's mental commands. Gert herself is highly intelligent, cynical, and politically conscious.
- Character Arc: Gert is the team's intellectual and moral compass, constantly questioning authority and the nature of heroism. Her sarcastic exterior hides a deep well of compassion, especially for her friends and Old Lace. Her romance with Chase is a highlight of the series. Her tragic death at the hands of a resurrected Geoffrey Wilder is one of the most impactful moments in the book's history, and her psychic link to Old Lace is passed on to Chase.
- Molly Hayes (Princess Powerful)
- Abilities: Molly is a mutant, whose X-gene grants her superhuman strength and invulnerability. The extent of her strength is immense, allowing her to go toe-to-toe with incredibly powerful foes. Her powers are tied to her adrenaline; using them makes her extremely sleepy, and she often falls asleep immediately after a feat of strength.
- Character Arc: As the youngest member, Molly represents the innocence the team is fighting to protect. Her childlike worldview often clashes with the grim reality of their situation, providing both comic relief and poignant emotional moments. She looks up to heroes like wolverine and idolizes her older teammates. Her journey is about growing up too fast while trying to retain her sense of wonder in a world that has betrayed her.
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)
The MCU adaptation keeps the core personalities intact but alters the origins and nuances of their abilities.
- Alex Wilder: His role as the non-powered strategist and initial leader remains the same. The show emphasizes his guilt over Amy Minoru's death and his desire to uncover the truth about PRIDE. His betrayal is re-contextualized; instead of being loyal to PRIDE, he makes a deal with Jonah to save one of his friends, though his methods still alienate him from the group.
- Nico Minoru: Her mother, Tina, possesses the Staff of One, which responds to Nico's DNA. The MCU's Staff is more technologically advanced in appearance and responds to Nico's emotional state, often acting on its own to protect her. The “one spell once” rule is not explicitly a feature; instead, her mastery of the Staff grows with her confidence and control.
- Karolina Dean: Her alien heritage is directly linked to Jonah's species, the Gibborim (a name used for his race, not the comic book giants). Her powers are identical—flight and light energy projection. Her journey of self-acceptance and her romance with Nico are central to the show's plot.
- Chase Stein: He is portrayed as a brilliant but unmotivated engineering prodigy who created his own powerful gauntlets, which he names “Fistigons,” based on his father's designs. His abusive relationship with his father, Victor, is a major driver of his character arc.
- Gertrude Yorkes: Her connection to Old Lace is the same—a telepathic bond. The show emphasizes her social activism and anxiety, making her a more grounded and relatable character. Her relationship with Chase is a key subplot.
- Molly Hernandez: Her surname is changed from Hayes to Hernandez. Her powers of super-strength are not from the X-gene but are the result of her geologist parents being exposed to mysterious, glowing rocks from Jonah's buried ship. She is an orphan adopted by the Yorkes, and discovering the truth about her biological parents is a key part of her story.
Part 4: Key Relationships & Network
Core Allies
- Young Avengers: The Runaways' most significant interaction with the wider Marvel Universe was their crossover with the Young Avengers during the Civil War event. The two teams, both comprised of young heroes operating outside the system, initially clashed over their differing philosophies. The Runaways' fierce anti-authoritarian stance put them at odds with the more traditionally heroic Young Avengers. Despite their differences, they developed a mutual respect, recognizing each other as kindred spirits.
- Cloak & Dagger: In the comics, Tandy Bowen and Tyrone Johnson were early allies. As former runaways themselves, they understood the team's plight. They were wrongfully accused of attacking Dagger, and the Runaways helped clear their names. In the MCU, the Runaways and Cloak & Dagger television series had a direct crossover episode, uniting the teams against a common threat.
- Victor Mancha: Initially believed to be the son of a minor villain, Victor was revealed to be the “son” of the robotic tyrant Ultron. The Runaways rescued him from his “destiny” to become the hero “Victorious” who would defeat Ultron, and he became a core member of the team, adding his electromagnetic powers to their ranks.
Arch-Enemies
- The Pride: Without question, the team's primary and most defining antagonists are their own parents. The Pride is not just a group of villains; they represent the ultimate betrayal of trust. The conflict is deeply personal, driven by love, hate, disappointment, and the twisted logic the parents use to justify their horrific actions. Every battle against them is emotionally fraught, forcing the children to fight the people they once loved.
- The Gibborim: The ancient, cosmic beings that The Pride served in the comics are the ultimate threat in the team's original story arc. These giants seek to “cleanse” the Earth and restore it to the pristine paradise it once was, a goal that requires the total annihilation of humanity. Their immense power makes them a world-ending threat that a small group of teenagers is uniquely positioned to stop.
- Alex Wilder: After his betrayal and death, Alex was resurrected and became a recurring antagonist. His deep knowledge of the team's strengths and weaknesses, combined with his ruthless intellect, makes him a particularly dangerous foe. His motivations are complex, often blurring the line between villainy and a twisted form of protection for his former friends.
Affiliations
The Runaways are defined by their lack of affiliations. They have repeatedly and forcefully rejected invitations to join established teams like the Avengers or to attend schools run by the X-Men. This stems from a deep-seated distrust of authority figures, born from the trauma of their parents' betrayal. They believe adults, even well-meaning ones, will inevitably lie and manipulate them. Their primary affiliation is to each other, operating as an independent cell dedicated to protecting themselves and others like them on the margins of society.
Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines
"Pride & Joy" (Runaways Vol. 1 #1-6)
This is the foundational storyline that establishes the entire premise. It details the children's horrifying discovery of their parents' ritual sacrifice, their subsequent flight from home, and their first tentative steps as a team. The arc is a masterclass in pacing, balancing shocking revelations with heartfelt character development. It culminates in their first major confrontation with The Pride, where they manage to survive but realize the fight for their lives has just begun. This arc perfectly encapsulates the series' core themes of lost innocence and youthful rebellion.
"True Believers" (Runaways Vol. 2 #1-6)
Picking up after the defeat of The Pride and the Gibborim, this storyline explores the question, “What now?” The Runaways are orphans and fugitives, trying to carve out a life for themselves while actively fighting crime in Los Angeles. The arc introduces a new character, Victor Mancha, who is prophesied to one day kill the Earth's heroes. The team is sent by a future version of Gertrude Yorkes to find and stop him, but they instead choose to defy fate and offer him a place on the team. This story solidifies their new mission: not just running away, but saving others who have been failed by the system.
Civil War: Young Avengers/Runaways (Crossover Miniseries)
This crossover highlights the Runaways' unique place in the Marvel Universe. When the Superhuman Registration Act is passed, Iron Man and S.H.I.E.L.D. attempt to apprehend the Runaways. The Young Avengers intervene, leading to a clash between the two teenage teams. The conflict is ideological: the Young Avengers, while operating outside the law, still believe in the larger heroic establishment, whereas the Runaways see the entire system as corrupt and untrustworthy. The event forces both teams to question their own beliefs and ends with a hard-won respect between them, solidifying the Runaways' status as staunch independents.
"Dead-End Kids" (Runaways Vol. 2 #25-30)
This arc, written by Joss Whedon, throws the team into chaos by transporting them to New York City in 1907. It is a brutal and formative experience that tests their bonds like never before. The story is most remembered for its tragic conclusion: the team manages to return to the present, but Gertrude Yorkes is mortally wounded and dies in Chase's arms. Her death is a turning point for the series, robbing the team of its cynical heart and sending shockwaves through their found family, particularly impacting Chase for years to come.
Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions
- Secret Wars (2015) / Battleworld: During the Secret Wars event, a different version of the Runaways existed in the Battleworld domain of Doomstadt. This team was a school for gifted youngsters from the Victor von Doom Institute for Prodigious Youths. Led by Molly Hayes, this group included different members like a young Bucky Barnes and Cloak & Dagger. They rebelled against the school's headmistress and discovered the final exam was a lethal trial.
- Marvel Zombies: A zombified version of the Runaways briefly appeared in the Marvel Zombies vs. The Army of Darkness series, where they are seen among the horde of infected heroes.
- Doctor Strange Movie Prelude Comic: In an MCU tie-in comic, the Runaways (in their MCU incarnations) have a brief encounter with Wong. He tracks them down to retrieve Tina Minoru's Staff of One, which he considers too dangerous for a teenager to possess. The encounter is brief but serves as one of the few direct connections between the Runaways show and the broader cinematic universe on the page.