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. ====== The Multiverse Saga ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity:** **The Multiverse Saga is the second major story arc of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), encompassing Phases Four, Five, and Six, which chronicles the fracture of reality and the subsequent conflict against Kang the Conqueror and his variants across infinite timelines.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** This saga serves as the successor to the [[the_infinity_saga|The Infinity Saga]], expanding the MCU's narrative canvas from a single timeline to an infinite number of parallel realities. Its primary function is to introduce the concepts of variants, incursions, and the cosmic consequences of tampering with time and space. * **Primary Impact:** Its most significant influence is the introduction of [[kang_the_conqueror|Kang the Conqueror]] as the new "big bad," a multiversal threat far more complex and numerous than [[thanos|Thanos]]. The saga fundamentally redefines the stakes, where the destruction of a single universe is just the beginning of a much larger cosmic war. * **Key Incarnations:** The "Multiverse Saga" is a specific branding for the MCU's overarching narrative from 2021 onwards. While Marvel Comics has featured multiversal stories for decades, including the seminal [[secret_wars|Secret Wars]] events that heavily inspire the saga, the term "Multiverse Saga" itself does not exist in the [[earth_616|Earth-616]] comic book continuity. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Real-World Creation and Announcement ==== The Multiverse Saga was officially announced by Marvel Studios President [[kevin_feige|Kevin Feige]] on July 23, 2022, during the studio's Hall H panel at San Diego Comic-Con. This announcement provided a formal structure and title to the collection of films and television series that began after //Avengers: Endgame// (2019). Feige laid out a detailed roadmap for Phases Four, Five, and Six, confirming that the sprawling, seemingly disconnected stories of Phase Four were, in fact, laying the groundwork for a multiversal conflict. This reveal was a direct parallel to how Feige had previously outlined The Infinity Saga, providing fans with a sense of direction and culminating in two new //Avengers// films: //Avengers: The Kang Dynasty// and //Avengers: Secret Wars//. The creative impetus for the saga stems from a desire to escalate the stakes beyond the universe-level threat of Thanos. By introducing the multiverse, the creative teams at Marvel Studios unlocked infinite storytelling possibilities, allowing for the introduction of alternate versions of beloved characters (variants), the integration of characters from previous non-MCU Marvel films (such as those from Fox and Sony), and the adaptation of some of Marvel Comics' most celebrated and reality-bending storylines. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The seeds of the Multiverse Saga were planted within the Infinity Saga, but they only began to sprout and grow into the primary narrative following the defeat of Thanos. The origin of the conflict is a complex tapestry woven across multiple projects. === The Foundational Concepts in Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === While the MCU's "Multiverse Saga" is a new construct, its conceptual roots are deeply embedded in decades of Marvel Comics history. The Marvel Multiverse was first explicitly mentioned in //Captain Britain// #279 (1976) by writer Chris Claremont, which designated the prime Marvel Universe as **Earth-616**. However, the idea of alternate realities had been explored even earlier. The foundational event that serves as the primary inspiration for the saga is the 2015 storyline **//Secret Wars//**, written by Jonathan Hickman. This epic event was the culmination of his multi-year run on //Avengers// and //New Avengers//. Hickman introduced the concept of **Incursions**: a cosmic phenomenon where two parallel Earths from different universes are drawn to the same point in space-time. If they collide, both universes are annihilated. The only way to prevent this is for one of the Earths to be destroyed first. This created a moral crisis for the [[illuminati|Illuminati]] (a secret cabal of Marvel's greatest minds), who were forced to build planet-killing weapons to destroy other Earths to save their own. The Incursions were revealed to be the result of the premature death of the [[eternity|Eternity]] of one universe, orchestrated by beings known as the Beyonders. The Incursions caused the "death" of the entire Marvel Multiverse, with the only survivors being those who escaped on a "life raft." [[doctor_doom|Doctor Doom]], having stolen the power of the Beyonders, used their might to stitch together the remnants of dead realities into a new patchwork planet called **Battleworld**, which he ruled as God-Emperor Doom. This comic storyline established the key elements the MCU would later adapt: * **Incursions:** The direct threat of universes colliding and annihilating each other. * **Multiversal Collapse:** The idea that the entire multiverse is fragile and can be destroyed. * **Variants:** The existence of multiple versions of every character, often with vast differences in morality and power. * **A Central, God-like Antagonist:** Doctor Doom's role as the architect of the new reality in //Secret Wars// provides a template for a villain who operates on a scale beyond that of a mere conqueror like Thanos. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The in-universe origin of the MCU's Multiverse Saga is the direct consequence of the [[avengers|Avengers']] actions in //Avengers: Endgame//. The "Time Heist" required them to tamper with history, creating branching timelines. Though [[captain_america|Captain America]] seemingly "clipped" these branches by returning the [[infinity_stones|Infinity Stones]], the damage was done. The true catalyst, however, was revealed in the Disney+ series //Loki//. The series introduced the **Time Variance Authority (TVA)**, an organization that existed outside of time and was tasked with pruning any timeline that deviated from the "Sacred Timeline." It was revealed that a multiversal war had previously broken out between infinite variants of a 31st-century scientist named **Nathaniel Richards**. One variant, **He Who Remains**, discovered a creature called Alioth that could consume time and space. He weaponized it, ended the war, and isolated a single "Sacred Timeline" to prevent his more malevolent variants (all known as Kang the Conqueror) from ever coming into existence. He created the TVA to maintain this fragile peace. The saga officially begins when **Sylvie**, a female Loki variant, kills He Who Remains in the Season 1 finale of //Loki//. His death shatters the Sacred Timeline, causing it to branch uncontrollably into an infinite number of parallel universes, thus birthing the modern MCU multiverse. This single act unleashed all of Kang's variants back into reality and set the stage for the coming war. Subsequent projects built upon this foundation: * **//Spider-Man: No Way Home// (2021):** A botched spell by [[doctor_strange|Doctor Strange]] cracks open the barriers between universes, pulling in characters who know [[spider_man|Peter Parker]]'s identity from other cinematic realities (notably, those from the Sam Raimi and Marc Webb films). This was the first major on-screen demonstration of the multiverse's new, chaotic state. * **//Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness// (2022):** This film formally introduced the concept of **Incursions** to the MCU, defining them as catastrophic collisions between universes caused by prolonged multiversal travel or tampering. It also showcased numerous alternate universes, such as Earth-838. ===== Part 3: Timeline, Key Turning Points & Core Concepts ===== This saga is defined by several new, complex cosmic rules and a carefully structured release slate that builds the narrative piece by piece. === Core Concepts Explained === To fully understand the Multiverse Saga, one must grasp its foundational terminology, which often differs slightly between the comics and the MCU. ==== What is a Variant? ==== A "Variant" is any individual who deviates from their prescribed path on a timeline, causing a new, branching timeline to be created. * **In the MCU:** As explained by the TVA, any choice, from being late for work to starting a war, can create a variant and a nexus event. The TVA's original purpose was to "prune" these variants and their timelines. With the TVA's mission changed, variants now exist freely across the multiverse. Examples include Sylvie, Classic Loki, Alligator Loki, and the various Kangs. * **In the Comics:** The term "variant" is less formalized. Characters from alternate realities are simply referred to as alternate-reality versions of themselves (e.g., [[miles_morales|Miles Morales]] of Earth-1610, Spider-Gwen of Earth-65). The concept is identical, but the specific jargon of "variant" is an MCU invention popularized by //Loki//. ==== What is an Incursion? ==== An Incursion is a destructive event where two universes collide, resulting in the annihilation of one or both. * **In the MCU:** As explained by Reed Richards of Earth-838, an incursion is the footprint one leaves on another universe. The longer you stay, the larger the footprint, and the greater the risk of triggering a collision. The destruction of one of Doctor Strange's variants in another universe was caused by his use of the [[darkhold|Darkhold]], which triggered an incursion he was forced to fix by destroying the universe he had endangered. * **In the Comics:** The concept is more apocalyptic and less personal. Incursions were a chain reaction affecting the entire multiverse, a cosmic sickness with a definite endpoint: the total death of all reality. They were not typically triggered by a single individual's travel but were a symptom of a larger cosmic imbalance. ==== The Sacred Timeline and the TVA ==== * **The Sacred Timeline:** In the MCU, this was not a single, "correct" timeline but rather a curated bundle of timelines that were allowed to exist by He Who Remains because they did not lead to the birth of a Kang variant. It was a cosmic cage, and Sylvie's actions broke it open. * **Time Variance Authority (TVA):** The bureaucratic agency responsible for maintaining the Sacred Timeline. After the death of He Who Remains, the TVA's purpose has become a subject of internal debate, with Loki and [[mobius_m_mobius|Mobius]] trying to reform it to protect the newly freed multiverse from Kang. === MCU Saga Timeline === The Multiverse Saga is officially divided into three phases. ==== Phase Four (2021-2022) - The Aftermath and Introduction ==== Phase Four deals with the fallout from the Infinity Saga while simultaneously introducing the core concepts and characters of the Multiverse Saga. Its projects are often more character-focused and seemingly disconnected, but they all explore themes of identity, grief, and the consequences of past events. * **Key Projects & Multiversal Contribution:** * **//WandaVision//:** Introduced the [[darkhold|Darkhold]] and showcased Wanda Maximoff's immense reality-warping power, setting up her transformation into the [[scarlet_witch|Scarlet Witch]]. * **//Loki// (Season 1):** The single most important project for the saga's setup. It introduced the TVA, variants, He Who Remains, and broke the Sacred Timeline, officially kicking off the multiversal chaos. * **//What If...?// (Season 1):** Explored various alternate timelines, familiarizing the audience with the concept of variants and culminating in a multiversal team-up, the Guardians of the Multiverse, who fought an Infinity Stone-powered Ultron. * **//Spider-Man: No Way Home//:** Brought the multiverse to the big screen in a major way, confirming the existence of other cinematic universes and their connection to the MCU (Earth-616). * **//Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness//:** Directly explored multiple universes, introduced America Chavez (a being who can travel the multiverse), and defined the threat of Incursions. ==== Phase Five (2023-2025) - The Rise of Kang ==== Phase Five shifts the focus directly to the central conflict, with Kang the Conqueror emerging as the primary antagonist. This phase is designed to build Kang's threat level and show the heroes struggling to comprehend the scale of the war they are in. * **Key Projects & Multiversal Contribution:** * **//Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania//:** Formally introduced **Kang the Conqueror**, a ruthless variant exiled to the Quantum Realm by his other selves. The film also revealed the **Council of Kangs**, a vast assembly of Kang variants from across the multiverse, establishing the sheer number and power of the saga's main villain. * **//Loki// (Season 2):** Explored the immediate consequences of the timeline's fracture, introducing another key Kang variant, **Victor Timely**, and delving deeper into the mechanics of the multiverse and the TVA's new role. * **//The Marvels//:** The post-credits scene teased a major incursion event, showing Monica Rambeau stranded in the alternate reality of Fox's [[x-men|X-Men]] franchise, meeting a variant of her mother and [[beast|Beast]]. * **Upcoming Projects:** Films like //Captain America: Brave New World//, //Thunderbolts*//, and //Blade// are expected to build the new roster of heroes who will eventually confront Kang, while //Deadpool & Wolverine// is set to be a direct, fourth-wall-breaking multiversal adventure involving the TVA. ==== Phase Six (2025-2027) - The Secret Wars ==== Phase Six is the grand finale of the saga, culminating in a conflict that threatens all of reality. * **Key Announced Projects:** * **//Fantastic Four//:** Expected to formally introduce Marvel's First Family, who are often central to cosmic and multiversal stories in the comics, particularly those involving Kang and Doctor Doom. * **//Avengers: The Kang Dynasty// (Title subject to change):** This film is positioned to be the //Infinity War// of this saga, likely depicting the first major, all-out assault by the Council of Kangs on the MCU's prime reality. * **//Avengers: Secret Wars//:** The ultimate conclusion. This film is expected to adapt elements of the 2015 comic storyline, potentially involving the collapse of the multiverse via incursions and the creation of a "Battleworld" where heroes and villains from every reality are forced to fight for survival. ===== Part 4: Central Characters & Antagonists ===== Unlike the Infinity Saga, which had a clear focal point in Thanos, the Multiverse Saga features a more complex and decentralized network of heroes and villains. ==== Core Protagonists ==== * **[[loki|Loki]]:** Arguably the central protagonist of the saga's setup. His journey from villain to a reluctant guardian of the timeline in his Disney+ series is the narrative engine that starts the entire conflict. He is one of the few characters who understands the true nature and scale of the threat posed by Kang and his variants. * **[[doctor_strange|Doctor Stephen Strange]]:** As the former Sorcerer Supreme and a master of the mystic arts, Strange is on the front lines of protecting reality from multiversal threats. His direct experiences with incursions and alternate universes in //Multiverse of Madness// make him a key authority on the dangers they face. * **[[spider_man|Peter Parker (Tom Holland)]]:** Peter's personal experience with the multiverse in //No Way Home// was traumatic but formative. He is the street-level embodiment of the saga's consequences, having sacrificed his identity and relationships due to a multiversal crisis. * **[[scarlet_witch|Wanda Maximoff / The Scarlet Witch]]:** Wanda serves as both a protagonist and an antagonist within the saga. Her immense power, amplified by the Darkhold, allowed her to threaten the entire multiverse in her quest to find her children. Her story is a cautionary tale about the dangers of unchecked power in a reality with infinite possibilities. * **[[ant_man|Scott Lang / Ant-Man]]:** Scott's intimate knowledge of the Quantum Realm unexpectedly placed him on a direct collision course with Kang the Conqueror. He is the first Avenger to face Kang directly and survive, giving him crucial, first-hand knowledge of the enemy. ==== Primary Antagonists ==== * **[[kang_the_conqueror|Kang the Conqueror and His Variants]]:** The definitive villain of the saga. Unlike Thanos, who was a single being with a singular goal, Kang is an infinite number of individuals spread across time and space. * **He Who Remains:** The "good" variant who created the Sacred Timeline to prevent a multiversal war. His philosophy was one of tyrannical peace. * **Kang the Conqueror:** The primary variant introduced in //Quantumania//. A brilliant, ruthless warlord exiled by his peers for being too extreme. He seeks to conquer the entire multiverse, not just a single timeline. * **The Council of Kangs:** An alliance of thousands of Kang variants from across the multiverse. Led by figures like Immortus, Rama-Tut, and a version of the Scarlet Centurion, they see themselves as the guardians of the multiverse, eliminating any threat to their control, including the Avengers and their own "exiled" variants. * **Victor Timely:** A Kang variant from the early 20th century who is a brilliant but unassuming inventor. He represents the potential of Kang before he embraces conquest, a key figure in //Loki// Season 2. ===== Part 5: Architectural Pillars of the Saga (MCU) ===== While the saga is sprawling, a few key projects serve as the primary load-bearing walls for its narrative architecture. === Loki (Season 1) === This series is the Genesis block of the Multiverse Saga. It took the abstract concept of "branch timelines" from //Endgame// and codified it with a rich, detailed lore. It established the rules: the Sacred Timeline, the TVA, the concept of pruning, and the existence of variants. Most importantly, its finale, "For All Time. Always.", is the inciting incident for the entire saga. The choice Sylvie makes to kill He Who Remains is the single moment the multiverse is irrevocably broken, setting every subsequent story in motion. === Spider-Man: No Way Home === If //Loki// opened the door to the multiverse, //No Way Home// blew the hinges off for a mainstream audience. The film served as a powerful, emotional proof-of-concept. It demonstrated that the stakes were not just about saving the world, but about the very fabric of identity and reality. By successfully integrating characters from two prior, non-MCU film series, it primed audiences for the "anything is possible" nature of the saga and celebrated Marvel's cinematic history, a key theme of a multiversal narrative. === Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness === This film was the first direct exploration of the chaotic, untamed multiverse post-//Loki//. It visualized the concept of universe-hopping in a visceral way and, critically, introduced the saga's ticking clock: Incursions. The film established that multiversal travel is inherently dangerous and has apocalyptic consequences. It also elevated the Scarlet Witch to a multiversal-level threat, demonstrating that the dangers of this new era wouldn't just come from Kang. === Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania === This film's primary function was to formally introduce the saga's main antagonist. It moved Kang from a theoretical threat (He Who Remains) to a physical, formidable, and personal one. The film established his powers, his motivations (conquest and escaping exile), and his history of wiping out entire timelines. The mid-credits scene revealing the Council of Kangs was a pivotal moment, transforming the threat from a single villain into an infinite army and setting the stage for //The Kang Dynasty//. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== The concept of "variants" is the creative lifeblood of the Multiverse Saga, allowing for endless reinterpretation of classic characters. **In the MCU:** The saga has already introduced numerous variants that have played significant roles. The Council of Kangs is the most prominent example, but the various Lokis (Sylvie, Classic Loki, Kid Loki, Boastful Loki, Alligator Loki) were the first to be explored in depth. //Multiverse of Madness// introduced the Illuminati of Earth-838, featuring variants like Captain Carter (Hayley Atwell), Captain Marvel (Lashana Lynch), Professor X (Patrick Stewart), and Mister Fantastic (John Krasinski). //No Way Home// featured hero variants (Tobey Maguire's and Andrew Garfield's Spider-Men) and villain variants (Willem Dafoe's Green Goblin, Alfred Molina's Doctor Octopus). **In Marvel Comics:** The concept has been a staple for over 60 years. Entire universes have been built around variants. * **The Ultimate Universe (Earth-1610):** A modernized reimagining of the Marvel Universe from the early 2000s. It gave us [[miles_morales|Miles Morales]], who eventually migrated to the prime Earth-616 after the 2015 //Secret Wars//. * **Age of Apocalypse (Earth-295):** A dark timeline where Professor X was killed before he could form the X-Men, allowing the mutant Apocalypse to conquer North America. It featured radically different, battle-hardened versions of the X-Men. * **Spider-Verse:** This major comic event brought together hundreds of Spider-People from across the multiverse, including Spider-Gwen (Gwen Stacy of Earth-65), Spider-Man Noir, and SP//dr, to fight the vampiric Inheritors. This event heavily inspired the animated films //Into the Spider-Verse// and //Across the Spider-Verse//, which, while not part of the MCU's Multiverse Saga, explore the same core concepts. The MCU's Multiverse Saga is essentially the cinematic adaptation of this long-standing comic book tradition, using the "variant" terminology from //Loki// as a unifying framework to bring this narrative device to the forefront of its storytelling. ===== See Also ===== * [[kang_the_conqueror]] * [[secret_wars]] * [[the_infinity_saga]] * [[loki_ Laufeyson]] * [[doctor_strange]] * [[time_variance_authority_tva]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The working title for //Avengers: The Kang Dynasty// was //Avengers: Anchorage//.)) ((The title "The Multiverse Saga" is a direct parallel to "The Infinity Saga," helping to brand the MCU's long-form storytelling into distinct chapters for audiences.)) ((Jonathan Hickman's run on //Avengers// and //New Avengers// from 2012-2015 is considered the primary source material for the concepts of Incursions and the multiversal collapse that will be adapted in //Avengers: Secret Wars//.)) ((The introduction of Patrick Stewart as Professor X in //Multiverse of Madness// was a landmark moment, as it was the first time a character from the Fox-produced //X-Men// films appeared within an MCU project, directly linking those films to the wider Marvel multiverse.)) ((The concept of a Council of Kangs is lifted directly from the comics, first appearing in //Avengers// #292 (1988). Their comic book counterparts were a council of three Kangs who sought to eliminate all divergent Kangs from the timeline.)) ((Due to off-screen issues involving actor Jonathan Majors, there has been speculation and reporting that Marvel Studios may be pivoting away from Kang as the central antagonist or changing the title of //Avengers: The Kang Dynasty//. As of late 2023, no official changes have been announced.))