Avengers Tower (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name),[8] formerly known as Stark Tower, is a skyscraper located in
Manhattan, New York City.[9] The building is originally owned by Stark Industries before serving as the headquarters of the Avengers until the Battle of Sokovia.[10] Tony Stark later sells the building to an unnamed buyer,[11] whose identity remains unknown as of Hawkeye.[12] Alternate versions of the building are seen in the
Void and a universe where
Ultron defeats the Avengers.[13][14]Avengers: Age of Ultron production designer Charles Wood built an enormous set for the film, one of the largest sets ever built for an MCU film, which featured multiple connected environments and levels.[15]
Camp Lehigh is a military training facility located in the fictional town of Wheaton,
New Jersey formerly belonging to the
United States Army which also acts as one of the bases of the
Strategic Scientific Reserve during World War II. Following the war, it is taken over by
S.H.I.E.L.D., with
Howard Stark and
Hank Pym performing research there while
Arnim Zola secretly uploads his consciousness into a series of computers.[18] In 2014, the camp is destroyed by a S.H.I.E.L.D. missile sent by Hydra. Years later, it is rebuilt and in 2025, hosts the first AvengerCon, attended by
Kamala Khan.
Clint Barton's farmhouse, also known as the "
safe house", is the private residence of
Clint Barton and his family. In 2015, Barton brings the Avengers to his house in order to take refuge. They are joined by
Nick Fury who gives them a motivational talk. Sometime after, the family relocates to another house. In 2018, Barton's family fall victim to
the Blip outside the house. In 2023, Barton returns to his house and is reunited with his restored family. In 2024, Barton brings
Kate Bishop and her dog,
Lucky, to the house to celebrate Christmas with his family.[citation needed]
The Golden Dagger Club[23] (based on the
Golden Daggers sect from the Marvel Comics) is an underground fight club located in
Macau, China.[24] The club was founded by
Xialing when she was sixteen years old after running away from the
Ten Rings organization. The club makes its income from
livestreaming its fights onto the
dark web, with several of its participants having included Black Widows,
Extremis soldiers,
Emil Blonsky, and
Wong.
Shang-Chi is tricked into visiting the club by
Wenwu, who raids the club with his men to capture his children and
Katy.
Gulmira is a fictional city in
Afghanistan and the hometown of
Ho Yinsen. In 2008, following numerous terrorist attacks by the
Ten Rings,
Tony Stark dons his newly-built
Iron Man Mark III armor and flies to the town, where he kills several terrorists and destroys an arsenal of
Jericho Missiles nearby. Stark then leaves the town and begins flying back to the United States, but is intercepted by two
F-22 Raptors sent by the
U.S. Air Force. At the same time,
James Rhodes calls Stark and informs him of the incident in Gulmira. Stark initially denies his involvement, claiming that he was "driving with the top down", but later confesses that he was wearing the Iron Man armor before narrowly escaping, prompting Rhodes to
cover-up the incident by announcing to the public that it was a "training exercise".[citation needed]
The Joint Dark Energy Mission Facility is a top secret research facility used by S.H.I.E.L.D. and
NASA to study the
Tesseract as part of
Project Pegasus.[30] In 1995,
Carol Danvers and
Nick Fury infiltrate the base and discover Danvers' involvement testing an experimental light-speed engine powered by the Tesseract designed by Dr.
Wendy Lawson. It is eventually destroyed in 2012 by the energy emitted by the Tesseract after
Loki's arrival at the facility.
Madripoor (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a fictional island
city-state in the
Indonesian archipelago that is controlled by the
Power Broker, and inhabited by several criminals. Sharon Carter is revealed to have been living luxuriously there as a dealer in stolen art since the
Sokovia Accords, afraid to go back to the U.S. for fear of arrest. The island is divided into two parts, the wealthy Hightown and the deprived Lowtown.[citation needed]
The Midtown School of Science and Technology (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a
STEM-focused fictional high school in Queens, New York City.[36][37] Its students include
Peter Parker,
Ned Leeds,
Michelle Jones-Watson,
Flash Thompson,
Betty Brant, Jason Ionello,
Liz, Cindy Moon, Seymour O'Reilly, Tiny McKeever, Charles Murphy, Abe Brown, Sally Avril, Brad Davis, Zach Cooper, and Josh Scarino. Faculty includes Roger Harrington,[38] Coach Wilson, Mr. Cobbwell, Monica Warren, Barry Hapgood, and Julius Dell. The school's principal is Principal Morita, who is shown to be a descendant of Howling Commandos member
Jim Morita.[39]Henry W. Grady High School in
Atlanta,
Van Nuys High School and
Reseda High School in
Los Angeles, as well as
Franklin K. Lane High School in
Brooklyn doubled as the school in Spider-Man: Homecoming.[40][41][42] To change the setting from the Atlanta set to Queens, Trixter created a CGI model of the school and added 360-degree matte paintings.[7]
Mount Wundagore (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), is a mountain which holds the power of the Darkhold and features a shrine dedicated to the Scarlet Witch.[43] After the Darkhold is destroyed. Wanda Maximoff forces
Wong to lead her to Wundagore, allowing her to dream-walk into the body of her Earth-838 self and be with that universe's versions of
Billy and
Tommy Maximoff. After seeing Billy and Tommy recoiling in horror at her corruption, she uses her powers to bring down Wundagore, sacrificing and killing herself in the process.
New Asgard, formerly Tønsberg, is a village in
Norway which housed the Tesseract for centuries until
Johann Schmidt stole it during World War II.[45] The town is also where
Odin resides in his final days after being banished by Loki. Following the Blip, the town is renamed New Asgard and serves as a refuge for the surviving
Asgardians and other inhabitants of the
Nine Realms. It is recognized by the UN as a city-state, is led by
Valkyrie, and has tourist attractions memorializing Asgard's history such as an ice cream parlour named the "Infinity Conez."[44]
The New York Sanctum (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) in
Greenwich Village, New York City is one of the three Sanctum Sanctorums on Earth. Located on 177A
Bleecker Street,[46][47] it is used by the Masters of the Mystic Arts to store various relics and serves as one of their bases, formerly guarded by Daniel Drumm until he is replaced by Stephen Strange following his death. In 2017, Strange detains Loki and invites
Thor to the Sanctum, directing him to his father Odin. In 2018, following his escape from the Statesman,
Bruce Banner crash lands in the New York Sanctum and meets Strange and Wong. Strange and Wong then discuss the threat with Banner and
Tony Stark.[48] In 2024, the Sanctum becomes covered in snow temporarily. It is also visited by
Peter Parker who requests Strange's help, in which he performs a memory removing spell. After the spell goes wrong, Strange tasks Parker and his friends to retrieve
multiversal displaced people and bring them to the Sanctum.[49] Also, in 2024, Strange along with
América Chávez visit Earth-838 New York Sanctum which has a statue of a deceased Strange and is protected by the Sorcerer Supreme from that universe, Karl Modo.[50] A set for the building was constructed at Longcross Studios in Surrey, England for Doctor Strange, which was also used in Thor: Ragnarok before it was demolished.[35][51]
Puente Antiguo is a fictional town in
New Mexico where in 2010, astrophysicist Jane Foster, her intern Darcy Lewis, and her mentor Erik Selvig were studying atmospheric disturbances when they encounter Thor arriving via the
Bifröst. Upon learning of
Mjölnir's location nearby, Thor storms the S.H.I.E.L.D. facility surrounding the hammer before being arrested by
Phil Coulson. Later, following the arrival of
Sif and the
Warriors Three, the town becomes the battleground for a fight between Thor and the
Destroyer, who had been sent by his brother Loki. In 2013, Foster moves back to the town with Thor and they pursue their relationship. However, in 2015, they break up and Thor leaves the town. In 2023, after
the Blip, Foster learns she has stage 4 cancer and receives treatments at the hospital. In 2024, Foster continues the treatments but they prove to not be helping her.
Cerro Pelon Ranch in
Galisteo, New Mexico doubled as the city in Thor,[52] which was extensively modified for the film.[53][54]
The Raft (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a maximum security prison, with
Thaddeus Ross serving as warden. Sam Wilson, Wanda Maximoff, Clint Barton, and Scott Lang are remanded to the prison after helping Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes evade capture, thus violating the Sokovia Accords. However, they are later broken out by Steve Rogers and Natasha Romanoff, though Barton and Lang wished to return to their families under house arrest. In 2018,
Trish Walker and
Willis Stryker are imprisoned in the Raft after going on respective killing sprees. In 2024, days following his escape from a prison in Berlin, the
Dora Milaje of
Wakanda detain Helmut Zemo to the Raft via the
Royal Talon Fighter.[57] Designed to hold super-powered individuals, the prison is located deep in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.[58][59]
The Red Room is a large aerial facility which acted as the primary base of the program of the same name, led by General
Dreykov. It is also the site where Black Widows are brainwashed and trained to become elite assassins.[61] It is destroyed in 2016 after
Melina Vostokoff took down one of its engines. Visual effects for the facility in Black Widow were provided by
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and
Digital Domain, who also worked on the final battle and skydiving sequences.[62][63] Digital Domain referenced
Stalinist architecture, such as the
Ostankino Tower in
Moscow, when designing the Red Room,[60] while the filmmakers hired military consultants to ensure the practicality of the facility.[64]
Rose Hill is a fictional town in
Tennessee where Tony Stark is forced to stay in after
his armor ran out of power. It is also the hometown of
Harley Keener, a child who aided Stark in repairing his suit and later attended his funeral. The fictional town is named after the city
of the same name in
North Carolina where portions of Iron Man 3 were filmed.[65]
Sokovia (Соковиja, Sokovija) is a fictional
landlocked country in Eastern Europe, using not Latin but
Cyrillic script, strangely located (thus must be not larger than
Duchy of Luxembourg), between
Central Europe countries:
Slovakia and the
Czech Republic, that both use Latin alphabet for around a millennium. Fictional Sokovia is the home of
Wanda and Pietro Maximoff, as well as Helmut Zemo. The United States initiated a bombing campaign against the country to stabilize and secure peace with Stark Industries-manufactured bombs, killing Wanda and Pietro Maximoff's parents. Additionally,
Mary Walker and her
U.S. Army squad were ambushed by the Sokovian Armed Forces, with almost all of them murdered. During the Hydra uprising, Hydra sets up
a research facility in Sokovia, where they conduct experiments on the Maximoff twins using
Loki's scepter. The country later serves as the battleground for
a conflict between the Avengers and Ultron, which results in the destruction of the country's capital city, Novi Grad, as well as the ratification of the Sokovia Accords. The country is
annexed by the surrounding countries soon after.[66] Scenes set in the city were filmed in the
Aosta Valley region in Italy in Avengers: Age of Ultron,[67] in which local storefronts were replaced with
Cyrillic script.[68]Hendon Police College, a training facility for London's
Metropolitan Police Service was also used to portray a city in Sokovia.[69]
The Stark Eco-Compound[70] is the residence of Tony Stark,
Pepper Potts, and their daughter,
Morgan Stark. Located in the countryside of Upstate New York,[1] it is built by Tony Stark shortly after his marriage with Potts, and he lived there until his death in 2023. His funeral is also held in front of his residence.
The Stark Expo, also known as the World Exposition of Tomorrow, is an exposition located at the
Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City. Started by Tony Stark's father, Howard, it brings together great minds and showcases new technology.[71][72][73] Past attendees include Phineas Horton (showcasing his Synthetic Man) and Peter Parker.[74]
The Stark Mansion is the private residence of Tony Stark, located at 10880 Malibu Point,
Malibu, California. It is destroyed by
Aldrich Killian (posing as the Mandarin) in a missile attack. The mansion's exterior shots in Iron Man were digitally added to footage of
Point Dume in Malibu,[75] while its interior shots were filmed at soundstages in
Playa Vista, Los Angeles.[76]
The Ten Rings Headquarters is the main base of operations of the Ten Rings criminal organization, located on an unknown mountaintop in China. The compound was founded a thousand years ago by Wenwu during his early years as a
warlord, and also served as his personal retreat for him and his family, with Shang-Chi and Xialing having spent their childhoods there. The compound includes a
throne room, training grounds for its warriors, a library housed with relics of
Ta Lo, a
dungeon, and an underground parking lot. After Xialing assumes leadership of the Ten Rings, she redecorates the compound with
graffiti reminiscent of her
Golden Dagger Club.[citation needed]
Wakanda (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), officially the Kingdom of Wakanda, is a highly advanced fictional African nation that formerly posed as a struggling
third world country before it is opened up to the world by
T'Challa. Its capital city is Birnin Zana, also known as the Golden City. The main language is
Xhosa, though its civilians also speak English.[79] It consists of lush river valleys, mountain ranges rich in natural resources, and a capital city that integrates space-age technology with traditional designs. Wakanda consists of six tribes: the Golden Tribe, the River Tribe, the Mining Tribe, the Merchant Tribe, the Border Tribe, and the Jabari Tribe. The country has been noted for its
Afrofuturism,[80][81][82] with the country cited as a possible example of how African nations might have developed in the absence of
European colonialism.[83][84][85]
Westview is a fictional town in New Jersey. Prior to the Blip, a plot of land in the town is purchased by the
Vision and Wanda Maximoff, but the Vision is killed soon after by Thanos. When Maximoff arrives at the plot of land, she inadvertently creates an anomaly around the town, placing almost all of its inhabitants under
mind control, transforming objects on a molecular level, and broadcasting a sitcom titled WandaVision. Dubbed "the Hex" by
Darcy Lewis,
Monica Rambeau gains superhuman abilities after passing through the barrier three times, while simulacrums of
Billy Maximoff,
Tommy Maximoff, and the Vision are created. When
Agatha Harkness attacks Maximoff, she destroys the boundary, the residents escape, and Wanda's children and Vision disintegrate. The town was named as a reference to Feige's hometown of
Westfield, New Jersey, but with the initials "W" and "V".[86]
Space
Contraxia is an
ice planet which is commonly visited by the
Ravagers as a place to relax, especially at the Iron Lotus
brothel. Sometime in 2014,
Stakar Ogord comes across Yondu on Contraxia, while
Howard the Duck also appears in the bar. A set for the Iron Lotus was built at
Pinewood Atlanta Studios in
Atlanta, Georgia, which Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 production designer Scott Chambliss sought to make it appear to have been put together from "repurposed junk", creating a "neon jungle" covered in ice and snow.[87]
Counter-Earth (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) also known as Halfworld, was an artificial planet located in the Keystone Quadrant. It was designed by the
High Evolutionary as a replication of Earth and was inhabited by the Humanimals.
Ego's planet (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a living mass of matter that the Celestial Ego formed around himself thousands of years ago, causing him to resemble a large red planet with a face. The planet is destroyed by a bomb planted by the Guardians of the Galaxy in Ego's brain, and is also destroyed by
Ultron in an alternate reality.[14] Visual effects of the planet in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 were provided by
Animal Logic, Method Studios, and
Weta Digital. Weta and Animal Logic's work were heavily based on
fractal art, including
Apollonian gaskets and
Mandelbulbs,[88][89] and was described by director
James Gunn as "the biggest visual effect of all time".[90]
The Garden,[91] also known as Planet 0259-S[92] and Titan II,[93] is a greenfield planet where
Thanos resides following his "retirement". After fulfilling his lifelong goal of wiping out half of the Universe, he teleports to the planet and smiles at the sunrise as he reflects on his success. Three weeks later, the Avengers travel there and Thor decapitates him upon learning that he had destroyed the
Infinity Stones.
Knowhere (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is the severed head of an ancient deceased Celestial which acts as the homeworld of the Exitar mining colony, founded by
Taneleer Tivan, the Collector. In 2014, Knowhere is visited by the Guardians of the Galaxy arrive who try to sell the
Power Stone to the Collector, but after an explosion caused by the Stone, the Collector's museum is destroyed. Shortly after,
Ronan the Accuser and his enforcers arrive and the Guardians leave. In 2018, Knowhere is attacked by Thanos who acquires the Reality Stone. In 2025, Knowhere is purchased by the Guardians from Tivan, who begin to renovate it into their new headquarters. They host a Christmas celebration for their leader,
Peter Quill by bringing
Kevin Bacon there. In 2026, Knowhere has become a mobile city. It comes under attack from the
High Evolutionary's Hellspawn and becomes the safe haven for the captured animals and engineered children.
Nebula decides to take leadership over Knowhere.[94] In an alternate reality,
Star-Lord T'Challa leads the Ravagers on a mission against the Collector on Knowhere.[95] Visual effects of the planet were created by
Framestore.[96]
The Kyln (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a high-security prison run by the
Nova Corps. The Guardians of the Galaxy are brought together in the prison and execute an escape plan, with
Ronan ordering
Nebula to massacre all of its inhabitants upon learning of Gamora's escape. Visual effects of the prison were created by Framestore.[96]
Lamentis-1 is a purple-hued moon that is destroyed by a nearby planet in the year 2077.
Loki and
Sylvie arrive on the moon through a Time Door, but are unable to escape due to their
TemPad having run out of power. After failing to board an Ark to escape, they are rescued and recaptured by the
TVA. Loki production designer Kasra Farahani opted to build an enormous practical set piece of the town Sharoo instead of using
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM)'s
StageCraft technology,[97] implementing a "blocky
ziggurat language" and using black-light paint to distinguish it from other alien worlds in the MCU.[98] Visual effects for the moon were provided by
Digital Domain, who also considered making the planet "a lush world covered in greenery", one "dominated by massive oceans", and one containing a
molten core which later
implodes.[99]
Morag is an abandoned
ocean planet located in the
Andromeda Galaxy, with its oceans only receding to expose its landmasses every 300 years. In 2014, Peter Quill arrives on the planet to obtain the
Orb, a mission that is replicated by
Star-Lord T'Challa in an alternate reality.[95] In 2023,
James Rhodes and Nebula time-travel to 2014 Morag and knock Peter Quill out before acquiring the Orb. Visual effects of the planet in Guardians of the Galaxy were created by
Moving Picture Company (MPC).[96]
Sakaar (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a planet ruled by the
Grandmaster, who holds his
Contest of Champions on the planet. In 2015, it was visited by
Bruce Banner and in 2017, by
Thor and Loki. In 2025, it is visited again by Banner, who retrieves his son, Skaar. In an alternate universe, the planet is destroyed by Ultron.[14] The art of Thor co-creator
Jack Kirby served as one of the primary inspirations for Sakaar's depiction in Thor: Ragnarok,[100] and was described by executive producer Brad Winderbaum as "the toilet of the Universe" surrounded by an endless number of wormholes.[101] A set for the planet was constructed at the
Village Roadshow Studios in
Oxenford, Queensland, including the Grandmaster's palace and the surrounding junkyard.[102] Visual effects for the planet's junkyard landscape and wormholes were created by
Double Negative and Digital Domain.[103] A Sakaarian
national anthem is featured in an unused version of the second
post-credits scene of Ragnarok, which was improvised by
Jeff Goldblum and Waititi.[104]
The Sovereign is an amalgamation of planets artificially fused together which serves as the homeworld to the
genetically-engineeredspecies of the same name. Powered by
Anulax Batteries, it is ruled by
Ayesha. The amalgamation is destroyed by Ultron in an alternate reality.[14] Visual effects for Ayesha's lair in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 were provided by Framestore,[106] while
Luma Pictures worked on the Sovereign world and its people.[88] A set for the planet was also built at Pinewood Atlanta Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, which employed a "1950s pulp fiction variation on 1930s art deco design aesthetic".[87]
Titan (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is an
exoplanet and the homeworld of Thanos before its inhabitants were wiped out from
overpopulation.[107] In 2018,
Tony Stark,
Peter Parker, and
Stephen Strange ally with the Guardians of the Galaxy to confront Thanos, who acquires the Time Stone following a battle and teleports to
Wakanda. In 2023, Parker, Strange, and the Guardians depart Titan through a portal. In an alternate 2018, in the 838 universe, the Illuminati kill Thanos on Titan, and then kill that universe's version of Stephen Strange after he is corrupted by the Darkhold.[108]
Vormir (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a barren planet and the location of the
Soul Stone, which is guarded by the
Red Skull. In 2018, Thanos coerces Gamora into revealing the Stone's location before teleporting there, where she is sacrificed for Thanos to obtain the Stone. Similarly,
Natasha Romanoff sacrifices herself in 2023 for
Clint Barton to acquire the Stone.
Xandar (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is the capital of the Nova Empire and home of the
Nova Corps. In 2014,
Ronan attacks Xandar in retaliation for the
Kree–Nova War, killing most of the Nova Corps before being defeated by the Guardians of the Galaxy and the
Ravagers. It is later decimated by Thanos in 2018, an event replicated by Ultron in an alternate reality.[14] Scenes set on the planet in Guardians of the Galaxy were filmed at
Millennium Bridge, London,[109][110] while visual effects were done by
Moving Picture Company (MPC).[96]
Asgard (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a small, flat planetary body and the home of the
Asgardians. It is destroyed by
Surtur.
Double Negative embedded a
computer-generated rendering of Asgard onto footage of the coast of Norway filmed with an Arri Alexa camera in a helicopter in Thor: The Dark World.[111] For its appearance in Thor: Ragnarok, production designer
Dan Hennah sought to give the realm "more of a humanity" than in previous films by adding smaller building perspectives, making it appear more practical and utilitarian.[112] A set for the realm was constructed at the
Village Roadshow Studios in
Oxenford,
Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, based on the aesthetics of previous Thor films,[102] while visual effects were provided by
Framestore based on assets
Double Negative had from The Dark World.[103]
The Rainbow Bridge is a long magical bridge that runs from the center of
Asgard to the edge, connecting the Royal Palace of Valaskjalf to Himinbjörg, the generator of the
Bifröst Bridge. In 2011, the Rainbow Bridge is destroyed by
Thor, but is later repaired by
Heimdall using the power of the
Tesseract.
Odin's vault, also known as Odin's treasure room, is a room in the Royal Palace of Valaskjalf that contained many powerful and magical artifacts, including a replica of the
Infinity Gauntlet, the Eternal Flame, the
Casket of Ancient Winters, and the
Tesseract.
Hel (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a region in
Niflheim that serves as the home of the dead. After
Hela is banished there by her father,
Odin, she attempts to escape and slaughters almost all of the Valkyrie, only to be defeated by Odin once again. The flashback sequence in Thor: Ragnarok featuring the Valkyrie was produced by
Rising Sun Pictures, who achieved its surreal ethereal appearance through a combination of
motion capture,
computer graphics, a 900 fps
frame rate, and a special 360-degree lighting rig containing 200 strobe lights.[113]
Muspelheim (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name) is a fiery realm that is home to the Fire Demons, most notably
Surtur. Two years following the
Battle of Sokovia,
Thor journeys there to confront Surtur on
Ragnarök before killing him. Thor: Ragnarok production designer Dan Hennah described the realm as a
Dyson sphere which draws power out of a dying star to energize its inhabitants.[115]
Nidavellir (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name) is an
Alderson disk surrounding a dying star, inhabited by gigantic
Dwarves who served as blacksmiths for the
Asgardians, forging weapons such as
Mjölnir,
Stormbreaker, and the
Infinity Gauntlet out of
uru. Sometime between 2014 and 2015, Thanos visits the forge, forcing the Dwarves to make the Infinity Gauntlet before slaughtering them and smelting
Eitri's hands.
Thor,
Groot, and
Rocket visit the forge several years later, aiding Eitri in creating Stormbreaker.
Svartalfheim (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name), also known as the Dark World, is a planet that is wreathed in perpetual darkness and ruled by the
Dark Elves, led by
Malekith the Accursed. Visual effects of Thor: The Dark World's prologue scene were done by Blur Studio, and mainly consisted of CGI with live-action shots interwoven throughout.[111] Subsequent scenes in the film were shot in
Iceland, with Double Negative adding ruins, mountains, Dark Elf ships, and skies.[111]
Midgard (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name), is another name for Earth.
The Astral Dimension (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), also known as the Astral plane, is a dimension in which the soul resides outside the body. It is mainly featured in the form of
astral projection in Doctor Strange when the
Ancient One pushes
Stephen Strange's astral form out of his body. The fight sequence in Doctor Strange between
Stephen Strange and a Zealot's astral forms was the first scene in the film written by director
Scott Derrickson, who was inspired by the comic Doctor Strange: The Oath.[116] Visual effects for scenes set in the dimension were provided by
Framestore, who described the process as "one of the hardest effects [they've] had to deal with".[117] This imagery is reused in Avengers: Endgame, WandaVision, Spider-Man: No Way Home, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. The Astral Dimension is also connected to the MCU's afterlife, which is interpreted as being a subjective reality depending on the belief system of the individual. In Black Panther and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, the Ancestral Plane is a location where deceased Wakandans reside, specifically those who have worn the mantle of Black Panther. The living are able to communicate with these past rulers upon ingestion of the
heart-shaped herb. In Moon Knight, the Duat is the name for the Egyptian perspective of the afterlife, where the goddess
Taweret ferries
Marc Spector and Steven Grant across an ocean of sand to reach the Field of Reeds. If a person's heart does not balance against the Feather of Truth, they are consumed by other lost souls in the sands. Spector and Grant make it back to the real world through the Gates of Osiris. In Thor: Love and Thunder, Valhalla is revealed to be the
Asgardian afterlife.
The Citadel at the End of Time is a castle atop an
asteroid at the
end of time where
He Who Remains resides and watches over the Sacred Timeline, which orbits the place. Carved in situ from the asteroid and made a "black stone with gold vein embellishments", the Citadel is mostly abandoned except for He Who Remains' office, with Loki production designer Kasra Farahani intending to reflect the loneliness of He Who Remains. Outside his office, there are also numerous 13-foot-tall statues of "sentinels of time" in the "Hall of Heroes", each holding half of an hourglass. A
nebula outside the window and a fireplace were used as light sources in He's office.[119] The design and architecture of the Citadel was inspired by
Hearst Castle and compared to
Sunset Boulevard.[118][120] The Production Designer for Loki was inspired by the Japanese repair technique
Kintsugi as it uses gold to repair cracks in broken pottery.[121]
The Dark Dimension (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a timeless dimension inhabited by
Dormammu. It is an amalgamation of itself and all other dimensions Dormammu had conquered and absorbed into it.
Stephen Strange visits it to bargain with Dormammu after
Kaecilius contacts it to absorb the Earth. Years later,
Clea, who reigns from the dimension, recruits Strange to help save it from an incursion. Visual effects of the dimension in Doctor Strange were provided by
Method Studios and
Luma Pictures.[117]Doctor Strange visual effects supervisor
Stephane Ceretti described the Dark Dimension as a "dynamic environment", with the Luma team using art by
Steve Ditko as a reference.[122]
The Mirror Dimension is a dimension which causes the surroundings to be reflected in different directions, similar to the function of a
mirror, without affecting the real world. Due to its nature, it is used by the sorcerers for training and controlling threats. The
Ancient One uses it during the
Battle of New York, while
Stephen Strange uses it against
Kaecilius,
Thanos,
Peter Parker, and
Wanda Maximoff. According to Doctor Strange director Scott Derrickson, the action sequences set in the dimension is an attempt to take Inception "to the Nth degree and take it way more surreal and way farther".[123]Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) was primarily responsible for visual effects of the Manhattan folding sequence, which consisted of 200 shots and was mainly CGI, although some real-life shots of New York were used.[117] Meanwhile, Luma Pictures worked on the first mirror sequence at the beginning of the film.[117]
The Quantum Realm (based on the
Microverse from the Marvel Comics) (for the theory in physics, see
quantum mechanics) with is a subatomic universe that exists outside of space and time. It can only be entered through
subatomic particles or forms of mystical magic.[124][125] In 1987,
Janet van Dyne went subatomic and was stranded in the realm for thirty years. Additionally, the Council of Kangs exiled
Kang the Conqueror to the realm. He befriended van Dyne, who helped him fix his time chair, only to learn from a neurolink who he really was. She then betrayed him, causing him to remain trapped. During this time, Kang conquered the realm and took control over it, building an empire, and displacing its residents.[126][127] In 2015,
Scott Lang goes subatomic to defeat
Darren Cross and enters the realm, but manages to escape, while Cross remains stuck in the realm. In 2018, van Dyne is rescued by
Hank Pym and they leave the realm. That same year, Lang becomes stuck in the realm's time vortex for five years, although he only experienced five hours in the realm. In 2019, agents of
S.H.I.E.L.D. return to the main timeline through the realm from an alternate 1983 to defeat the
Chronicoms. In 2023, Lang and the
Avengers use the realm to travel to alternate timelines to reverse
the Blip. An
alternate Thanos gets ahold of their technology and uses the realm to travel himself, his ship, and his army to their universe. In 2026, van Dyne, Pym, Lang,
Hope van Dyne, and
Cassie Lang are transported into the realm after Cassie's quantum satellite gets heard by Cross. They find themselves hunted by Kang, who wants revenge on van Dyne. After they find a portal to leave the realm, Kang tries to follow, but ultimately gets defeated and pulled into his multiversal power core. The Quantum Realm is so named because the name "Microverse" is associated with the
Micronauts, whose rights are held by
Hasbro Studios.[128]Quantum physicist and
California Institute of Technology staff researcher Spiros Michalakis suggested the new name.[129] Visual effects for the dimension in Ant-Man, Doctor Strange, and Ant-Man and the Wasp were provided by Method Studios.[117]
The Soul World (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), also known as the Way Station,[130] is a
pocket dimension inside the
Soul Stone[131] which Thanos finds himself in for a brief moment after he snapped his fingers and wiped out half of the Universe's population, where he encountered a young
Gamora. Christopher Markus, co-writer of Avengers: Endgame, also stated that Banner met the Hulk in the Soul World. The Soul World was originally also going to be visited by
Tony Stark in a deleted scene of Avengers: Endgame, where he would have met an older version of his daughter
Morgan;[132] however, in the final cut of the movie, it is where
Clint Barton briefly ends up after
Natasha Romanoff sacrifices herself for him to obtain the Soul Stone.
The Veil of Noor separates Earth from a dimension inhabited by supernatural cosmic beings known as the Clandestines, or the djinn in Pakistani culture. Several individuals were exiled from the Noor dimension to Earth in the 1940s, shortly before the
Partition of India. Most seek mystical bangles imbued with Noor power to tear down the Veil and return home. One, named Aisha, fled with one of the bangles, which was passed down through the generations to Kamala Khan.
The Chitauri mother ship was a large spaceship which served as the
mother ship of the
Chitauri army during the
Battle of New York. It was destroyed by
Tony Stark when he carried a
nuclear missile through a wormhole into space, severing the connection between the mothership and the Chitauri as well as the
Leviathans and ending the battle. In a
deleted scene of Avengers: Endgame,
Rocket teases the Avengers about not destroying it earlier.[148]
The Dark Aster is the flagship spaceship of
Ronan the Accuser, a three-mile wide ship in the
Kree Accusers fleet. Angered by the signing of a peace treaty with the Nova Empire, he used it to attack
Xandar, but is destroyed by the Milano. A similar spacecraft known as the Silver Aster is used by him during the
Kree–Skrull War.[151] Visual effects of the spaceship were created by
Moving Picture Company (MPC) and
Sony Pictures Imageworks.[96]
The Domo[152] is the
Eternals' starship which serves as their primary base of operations. Composed of three large, circular rooms,[153] it is completely silent, controlled by the Eternals' golden cosmic energy, and is used by them to arrive on Earth 7,000 years ago.[154] The most important room is known as the "bridge", which contains a large statue of the
CelestialArishem and pattern-covered walls which generate the Eternals' suits; Eternals production designer
Eve Stewart explained that the room was designed to look like mosques, synagogues, churches, and temples, and the set was constructed in eight weeks, illuminated by lights through a
fiberglass below.[153] Another room contains numerous ancient artifacts and
mythological objects, including the Emerald Tablet,
King Arthur's
Excalibur, and the
Holy Grail.[155][156] The unique design of the ship was inspired by the art of
Jack Kirby,
meteor dust, as well as
sacred geometry,[157][153] and it is named after the Marvel Comics character
of the same name.[158]
The Eclector is a large spaceship used by
Yondu's
Ravager clan until its destruction in 2014. However, Yondu managed to escape along with
Rocket and
Groot on the ship's third quadrant prior to its destruction. Visual effects for scenes set in the spaceship in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 were provided by
Framestore;[106] the destruction of the ship was handled by
Weta Digital.[159] A set of the ship was constructed at
Pinewood Atlanta Studios in
Atlanta, Georgia in sections to provide a 360-degree view of the ship as well as to move sections around and portray different areas of the ship.[87]
The Milano is an M-type spaceship flown by
Peter Quill since he was ten, named after his childhood crush,
Alyssa Milano. It later becomes the main ship for the
Guardians of the Galaxy, but is destroyed during the
Battle of Xandar. After being rebuilt by the
Nova Corps, it is severely damaged by an asteroid field and abandoned on Berhert, with the Benatar becoming the Guardians' new ship. To limit the amount of
blue screen the actors had to interact with, interiors for the ship were constructed at
Pinewood Atlanta Studios in
Atlanta, Georgia for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,[87] including the cockpit that had been built for the first film and originally stored in London.[160] The real-life Alyssa Milano called the homage "pretty cool" upon learning of the reference.[161] In an alternate reality where
T'Challa became Star-Lord, the spaceship is named the Mandela instead, a reference to
Nelson Mandela.[95]
Q-Ships are ring-shaped spaceships used by Thanos and
his children. They are stored in the Sanctuary II, and deployed from the ship when invading other planets. The Q-Ships also contain Outrider dropships, allowing them to unleash Outriders onto a battlefield. When
Ebony Maw and
Cull Obsidian attack New York City in 2018,
Doctor Strange is taken prisoner on a Q-Ship until his rescue by Tony Stark and
Peter Parker. One is also used by Proxima Midnight and Corvus Glaive to leave
Scotland, while another deploys Outrider dropships into the atmosphere during the
Battle of Wakanda.
The Sanctuary II is a 12-mile-long (19 km) long spaceship owned by Thanos, which serves as an orbital base while an invasion is in progress as well as a heavily armed warcraft.[162] It can also carry four
Q-Ships under its wings. Following the
Time Heist, an alternate version of Thanos and his army from 2014 is transported to 2023 on the Sanctuary II, and the
Avengers Compound is destroyed by its missiles. During the subsequent
Battle of Earth, Thanos orders his troops to "rain fire" on the battlefield, but the ship is destroyed by
Carol Danvers.
The Statesman is a large spaceship owned by the
Grandmaster stolen by
Loki and used to transport the
Asgardians away from
Asgard before it is destroyed during
Ragnarök. However, on its way to Earth, it is attacked by the Sanctuary II and destroyed by Thanos using the
Power Stone.
Helicarriers (based on the Marvel Comics vehicle
of the same name) are flying
aircraft carriers used by
S.H.I.E.L.D. as mobile command centers. They are equipped with
optical camouflage and, later, large-sized cannons and repulsor engines courtesy of Tony Stark, as well as two stacked carrier decks and a hull number of 64.[105] During the
Hydra uprising,
Hydra attempts to use three Helicarriers linked to S.H.I.E.L.D. satellites to assassinate potential threats, but they are destroyed by
Steve Rogers and his allies. Following the dissolution of S.H.I.E.L.D., the original Helicarrier is recommissioned and used to assist the
Avengers during the
Battle of Sokovia. Visual effects for the Helicarrier in The Avengers were provided by
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), Scanline VFX, Evil Eye Pictures, and Luma Pictures,[105] while visual effects in Captain America: The Winter Soldier were also provided by ILM.[163]
Leviathans are large cybernetically-enhanced serpentine creatures used by the
Chitauri under the command of Thanos to transport troops and warships, weighing approximately three million tonnes each. Following the
Battle of New York, the Leviathans are salvaged by
Hydra, with one of them stored in the
Hydra Research Base in
Sokovia. Another group of Leviathans are later used by an alternate version of Thanos from 2014 during the
Battle of Earth, and are destroyed by Tony Stark using the
Nano Gauntlet.
Quinjets (based on the Marvel Comics vehicle
of the same name) are technologically advanced jets used by
S.H.I.E.L.D., the
Avengers, and
S.T.R.I.K.E. teams. After the
Battle of Sokovia, the
Hulk leaves on a Quinjet, escaping Earth's atmosphere before crash-landing on
Sakaar via a wormhole. The interior of the jet was built for The Avengers and later shipped to Australia for Thor: Ragnarok.[164]
Land vehicles
Luis' van is a brown 1972
Ford Econoline owned by
Luis and used by him,
Scott Lang,
Dave, and
Kurt. It is later used by them for their company,
X-Con Security Consultants, and is outfitted with a miniaturized
Quantum Tunnel. Lang is later trapped in the Quantum Realm for five years until a rat ran over the control panel of the Quantum Tunnel, allowing him to escape. It is destroyed by Thanos during the
Battle of Earth.
Steve Rogers' motorcycle is a
Harley-Davidson motorcycle used by Steve Rogers. In Captain America: The First Avenger, Rogers uses a weaponized 1942
WLA motorcycle in
World War II in his fights against
Hydra.[165] In Captain America: The Winter Soldier and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, this model is shown to be displayed in the Captain America exhibit in the
Smithsonian Air and Space Museum.[166] In The Avengers, Rogers is shown to have switched to a
Softail Slim model for commuting around New York City, before using the
Street 750 model when fleeing from pursuing Hydra agents in The Winter Soldier.[167] Rogers later uses other models such as the Breakout,[168]V-Rod and the Softail Slim S.[169]
The Ant-Man suit (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) enables the wearer to change size while retaining strength, as well as communicate with and control ants. It was designed by
Hank Pym and used during
S.H.I.E.L.D. missions until the
Pym Particles began to have an effect on him, and is later stolen by
Scott Lang, who becomes the next Ant-Man.
Double Negative and
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) worked on Ant-Man's shrinking effect in
the first film, which shows the outline of his body as in the comics.[173]
The Black Panther suit (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a protective
nanotech suit woven from
vibranium that is worn by the King of Wakanda in his duties as the Black Panther. The suit features retractable claws made of vibranium and is nearly impenetrable. Versions of the suit have been worn by
T'Chaka,
T'Challa,
N'Jadaka, and
Shuri. T'Challa's second suit is also able to be shrunk down into a necklace as well as absorb energy for future redistribution. The suit is a combination of a practical costume and visual effects, featuring a vibranium mesh weave similar to
chainmail.[174]Captain America: Civil War costume designer
Judianna Makovsky called the Black Panther costume "difficult" since "you needed sort of a feline body, but it's hard and practical at the same time. You needed a feeling of some sort of ethnicity in there, but of a world [Wakanda] we weren't really creating yet, so you didn't want to go too far and say too much about that world."[175]
Captain America's uniform (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is the costume worn by the bearers of the Captain America mantle whilst on missions.
The first uniform, worn by
Steve Rogers, is a cloth
USO costume based on his original costume from the comics, along with a
heater shield. Upon hearing that
Bucky Barnes' unit was
MIA, he alters his USO uniform for the rescue mission, wearing a combat jacket and pants over the costume and donning a blue helmet from a USO
chorus girl.
Howard Stark later designs a combat uniform made of carbon polymer, with leather pouches and a holster, a wingless mask, and a
round vibranium shield. After being unfrozen, he uses a costume designed by
S.H.I.E.L.D. which resembles his USO uniform. During his time with
S.T.R.I.K.E., he uses a new uniform designed for stealth missions which has a darker shade of blue. He later returns to a variant of his
World War II costume, taken from a display at the Captain America exhibit at the Smithsonian.
Tony Stark later creates a new uniform for Rogers, which incorporates magnetic gauntlets, allowing him to recall his shield. A slightly different version of this suit is used during the
Avengers Civil War. During his exile, the suit is altered to remove the star and the Avengers logo. He is equipped with Wakandan shields on his arms before the
Battle of Wakanda. After the Avengers reunite, he uses another new uniform.
When
John Walker is handed the Captain America mantle, he uses an entirely new design, based on
that from the comics: the uniform is blue, with red highlights and chest stripes, and includes red fingerless gloves. In place of the Avengers logo, it has the
flag of the United States on the arms, and a stylized star on the mask and chest. He also carries a handgun and a version of Captain America's shield given by Steve Rogers to Sam Wilson. After he is stripped of the title, he builds a new shield, and dyes his uniform black, becoming the "
U.S. Agent".
Sam Wilson dons a new version of the uniform as the new Captain America, incorporating his new
vibranium wings.[176] This version, a gift from Wakanda, sticks closely to the version that he wears in the comics, with the main color being white. The star design spreads across the whole chest, and resembles the logo of the
U.S. Air Force. The white mask incorporates Wilson's red goggles and stretches from the shoulders to just above his ears.
The
Maasai people of
Kenya (top) inspired about 80% of the design of the
Dora Milaje, Wakanda's all-female special forces (bottom).[177]
The Dora Milaje uniform is the uniform worn by the
Dora Milaje of
Wakanda. It is made up of a body suit, harness, vibranium shoulder armor, neck rings, knee-high boots, and a waist cape. Silver rings are worn on the neck and arms (with the exception of
Okoye, whose rings are gold to denote her status as general). The design of the uniform was partially inspired by tribal
Filipino costume, as well as African influences.[178]Black Panther costume designer
Ruth E. Carter wanted to avoid the "girls in the bathing suits" look, and instead had the Dora Milaje wear full armor that they would practically need for battle.[179] Anthony Francisco, the Senior Visual Development Illustrator, noted the Dora Milaje costumes were based 80 percent on the
Maasai people, five percent on
samurai, five percent on
ninjas, and five percent on the
Ifugao people from the
Philippines.[177]
The EXO-7 Falcon is a winged harness created by the
U.S. military for the
Air National Guard. It is used by former
PararescuemenSam Wilson and Riley, the latter of whom was killed during a mission. Sam then left active duty and joined the
Avengers after assisting Steve Rogers and
Natasha Romanoff during the
Hydra uprising. The suit features retractable wings and a pair of collapsible
Steyr SPP submachine guns. Tony Stark later creates a new set of bulletproof retractable wings, featuring
a drone as well as missiles and a wrist-mounted submachine gun. During a battle with
John Walker, the suit is severely damaged beyond repair, and Sam leaves it with
Joaquin Torres.
Iron Man's armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a set of
armored suits created by Tony Stark to combat threats. Most follow the same red and gold color scheme and contain similar functions. Stark would eventually create up to 85 armors, 34 of which are part of the original "
Iron Legion". Many of his early suits were highly mobile and versatile, with the ability to be transformed or stored in various objects including a suitcase (Mark V), a cylindrical pod (Mark VII), and detachable parts (Mark XLII). Eventually, beginning with the Mark L armor, Stark is able to store his armor in the form of nanobots in his
arc reactor which could flow over his body, assembling based on cybernetic commands, allowing Stark to create endless combinations and new weapons to manifest out of the armor.
The Hulkbuster armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a modular add-on to Tony Stark's regular armor. Developed by Stark and
Bruce Banner, its purpose is to restrain the Hulk and minimize the damage caused by him. The first-generation armor (the Iron Man Mark XLIV armor) is remotely controlled by a mobile service module named Veronica (named after the
Archie Comics character
Veronica Lodge)[180] and is used to restrain the Hulk following a rampage by him in
Johannesburg, South Africa. In 2018, Banner is seen wearing an upgraded version of the armor (the Iron Man Mark XLVIII armor), which he uses during the
Battle of Wakanda and the killing of
Thanos.
The Hydra Stomper armor is a suit of armor built by Howard Stark for Steve Rogers during World War II as the
Hydra Stomper in an alternate reality in which
Peggy Carter becomes
Captain Carter.[181] Powered by the
Tesseract, the writers of What If...? originally named the armor the "Hydra Smasher" before
Kevin Feige suggested the name change.[182]
The Iron Legion (based on the Marvel Comics element
of the same name) is two separate sets of armor built by Tony Stark. The first is a set of specialized armors (the Mark VIII–XLI armors) built due to his insomnia for various situations that he might encounter, which he uses against
A.I.M. He eventually destroys them due to the friction they cause between him and Pepper. The second set is a series of drones built by Stark to aid the Avengers, which are later taken control by
Ultron and destroyed in battle with the Avengers.
The Iron Monger armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is an armored suit similar to the
Iron Man armor. After
Obadiah Stane gains Stark's salvaged Mark I armor from the
Ten Rings, he reverse engineers it to create an even more powerful suit with added weapons, such as a minigun on the right arm. The suit is powered by Stark's personal
arc reactor, forcing Stark to use a replacement to power his own suit, although he manages to defeat Stane.
The Iron Spider armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name), also known as Item 17A, is an armored nanotech suit created by Tony Stark for
Peter Parker's use as an Avenger. The suit features four mechanical legs that can be unfolded from the back of the suit, allowing enhanced mobility and climbing skills, as well as
web-shooters. Following his fight with the
Vulture, Stark offers Parker the suit and membership to the Avengers, but Parker declines both. Two years later, Stark uses it to rescue Parker after he falls from
Ebony Maw's
Q-Ship, and Parker uses it during the
Battle of Titan, the
Battle of Earth, and a local charity event. The suit was then confiscated by the Department of Damage Control, but Parker eventually got it back and used it to find an MIT administrator, and later to battle
Otto Octavius. For the suit's first appearance at the end of Spider-Man: Homecoming,
Framestore created models and textures in anticipation for future MCU projects, while Trixter created the "clean, high tech" vault that the suit appears in.[7]
The Rescue armor[1] (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name), also known as the Iron Man Mark XLIX armor,[183] is an armored nanotech suit created by Tony Stark for his wife,
Pepper Potts. It features a blue and silver color scheme, and many of the same abilities as
Iron Man's armor. Potts uses it in the
Battle of Earth against
Thanos and his forces.[184]
The War Machine armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a powered suit of armor originally developed by Tony Stark as the Iron Man Mark II armor before it is confiscated by
James Rhodes and enhanced by
Justin Hammer with machine guns in the wrists, a minigun on the right shoulder and a grenade launcher on the left, weapons which later proved to be ineffective. Stark later removes the modifications and rebuilds the suit himself using his own superior technology. This upgraded suit is briefly given a red, white, and blue color scheme and renamed the Iron Patriot by the U.S. government. It is later changed back to the gray color scheme and upgraded again, but accidentally disabled by the
Vision mid-flight during the
Avengers Civil War, causing Rhodes to crash and become
paralyzed. For the
Battle of Earth, Rhodes dons a new suit reminiscent of the original Iron Patriot armor, featuring multiple advanced weapons such as rocket launchers.
The Spider-Man suit (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a suit worn by
Peter Parker while fighting crime as the
vigilante known as Spider-Man. His first suit, a simple homemade costume, consisted of a red hoodie, blue pants, a blue shirt, a red mask with black goggles, and homemade Web-shooters. After Tony Stark recruits him during the
Avengers Civil War, he is given a new, more advanced suit, featuring a more modern and streamlined design,
a built-in AI, improved goggles, a
remote drone, a holographic interface, a parachute, a tracking device, a heater, an airbag, and more advanced Web-shooters.[185]Joe Russo described this suit as "a slightly more traditional,
Steve Ditko influenced suit",[186] while Spider-Man: Homecoming co-producer Eric Hauserman Carroll noted that Marvel intentionally included many "fun and wacky" features from the comics in the suit.[185] He ceases to use this suit during the
Infinity War, instead using the
Iron Spider armor, which offers more protection and abilities. In an effort to conceal Spider-Man's identity,
Talos (disguised as
Nick Fury) has a seamstress make Peter a new stealth suit in Europe, later dubbed the "Night Monkey" suit by
Ned Leeds. This version is entirely black in color, with the hood consisting of a black mask and flip-up goggles. After the suit is stolen by a
prison warden, Peter builds himself a new one using the late Stark's technology, which he uses during his battle against
Mysterio in London. Upon the arrival of multiple villains from alternate realities due to
Stephen Strange's miscasting of a spell intended to erase the world's knowledge of his identity as Spider-Man, Parker battles a displaced
Otto Octavius, who damages the Iron Spider armor and forces Parker to use his defaced red-and-black suit inside-out; after Octavius is cured, he returns the nanotechnology which his tentacles had absorbed onto Parker, embellishing it into a more advanced suit. Later, after Strange erases the world's knowledge of Parker's existence, reconcealing his secret identity as Spider-Man, Parker once again dons a brand new red-and-blue suit stitched from homemade materials in his apartment.[187] Trixter provided visual effects for the Stark suit and the spider drone in Spider-Man: Homecoming, and also applied a rigging, muscle and cloth system to
Sony Pictures Imageworks' homemade suit to "mimic the appearance of the rather loose training suit".[7]
Thanos' armor is a suit of armor worn by Thanos during his time as a warlord. It consists of a helmet, breastplate, greaves, cuisses, gauntlets, and metal boots. He discards the armor following his attack on the Statesman, and uses it as a
scarecrow after he completes his mission and retires to the
Garden. An alternate version of Thanos from 2014 wears the armor during the Battle of Earth, during which the armor is heavily damaged by
Wanda Maximoff. The armor is eventually destroyed by Tony Stark. Gamora kills Thanos in an alternate reality before seizing his armor and blade.[188]
The Time Suits,[189][better source needed] also known as the Advanced Tech Suits[190] or Quantum Suits,[191][192] are a variation of the
Ant-Man suit, allowing the Avengers to shrink down to microscopic size and travel back in time through the
Quantum Realm. They are used by the surviving Avengers and
Guardians of the Galaxy. The suits as depicted in Avengers: Endgame were entirely digital creations, and were designed by
Marvel Studios head of visual development
Ryan Meinerding as a combination of Ant-Man, Iron Man, and the Guardians' technologies.[193]
Captain America's shield (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a weapon made of vibranium used by the bearers of the
Captain America mantle, including Steve Rogers,
John Walker, and
Sam Wilson. It is created by
Howard Stark and given to Rogers during World War II. The shield gets destroyed during the
Battle of Earth. After Rogers' retirement, an alternate version of the shield is given by Wilson to the Smithsonian, but the government passes it to John Walker, who uses it to murder a
Flag Smasher. After he is stripped away of his title as Captain America, John Walker creates a new homemade shield from
scrap metal and his
Medal of Honor, which he later abandons in New York City.[195] The shield is seen as a symbol of Captain America's strength and legacy.[196] A replica of the shield also appears in Iron Man and Iron Man 2, which director
Jon Favreau included because he felt it was important to include
inside references for fans of the comics.[197]
Chitauri guns were the primary weapons used by the
Chitauri during the
Battle of New York. Many of these guns were abandoned on Earth and salvaged by various humans in attempts to reverse-engineer them.
Extremis (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a form of genetic manipulation developed by
Maya Hansen. It gives a person an advanced healing factor, meaning that they are able to regenerate from injury,
deformities, and
psychological trauma, as well as the ability to generate fire.
Aldrich Killian uses it to heal his weak physique and cure injured war veterans such as
Eric Savin and
Ellen Brandt. The rebel
SkrullGravik uses Extremis as part of his
Super-Skrull program, and uses it on himself, as he heals himself after being stabbed in the hand by
Talos.
Gungnir (based on the Norse mythological object
of the same name) was Odin's spear, capable of channelling the
Odinforce. It has also been used by Loki and Thor. The spear was presumably destroyed during
Ragnarök.
The Hammer Drones were
remotely-controlled humanoid
drones designed by
Ivan Vanko and commissioned by
Justin Hammer following his previous failed attempts to recreate the
Iron Man armor. They were designed for use by various branches of the military, with Hammer hoping that they would replace Iron Man. However, Vanko secretly takes control of the drones and used them to wreak havoc at the
Stark Expo, though they are ultimately defeated by Tony Stark and
James Rhodes and destroyed by Vanko.
Hawkeye's bow and quiver are a pair of tools used by
Clint Barton that serve as his primary weapons. The bow is a collapsible
recurve bow, whilst the quiver is mechanized, able to store and deploy his signature trick arrows. After
the Blip, he swaps his bow for a
katana which he uses to murder criminals such as the Japanese
Yakuza.
Hofund (based on the Norse mythological object
of the same name), also known as the Bifröst Sword, is a magical sword used by
Heimdall (and, during his exile,
Skurge) that is able to channel the
Bifröst. It also served as the key to activate the Bifröst. It is last used by Heimdall to transport the
Hulk to Earth before he is killed by
Thanos, and was presumably destroyed along with the Statesman.
The Infinity Gauntlet (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a left-handed metal gauntlet owned by
Thanos and forged from
uru by
Eitri and the Dwarves of
Nidavellir. It is capable of harnessing the power of all six
Infinity Stones at once, thus making the wearer able to do anything in their imagination. A replica of the Gauntlet is also kept by Odin in
his vault on Asgard, which originally appeared in Thor as an
Easter egg before Marvel Studios realized that it could not be the actual one and formulated an internal theory that the gauntlet was a fake, which led to a scene in Thor: Ragnarok where Hela declares it fake.[202]
The Jericho is an experimental
guided missile developed by Stark Industries for the
United States Armed Forces that can separate into 16 smaller missiles when launched. At a demonstration for the weapon in
Afghanistan, Tony Stark's convoy is ambushed, and he is captured by the
Ten Rings, who forces him to build the missile for them. However, Stark secretly builds the first
Iron Man armor and escapes.
Loki's scepter, also known as the Chitauri Scepter[2] or simply as the Scepter, is a bladed weapon with an extendable handle given as a gift to Loki by
Thanos. It has a blue gem at the top containing the
Mind Stone, allowing Loki to
brainwash and mind control others by touching them with it. After the
Battle of New York, it is taken by
Hydra agents disguised as
S.T.R.I.K.E. team agents and used by
Strucker and Dr.
List to unlock and amplify
Wanda and
Pietro Maximoff's abilities. It is later recaptured by the Avengers and used by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner to create
Ultron. Ultron then uses it to brainwash
Helen Cho, who in turn creates the
Vision, with the gem becoming embedded in his forehead. During the
Time Heist,
Steve Rogers uses his knowledge of the future to gain the Scepter from the S.T.R.I.K.E. team before using it to brainwash an alternate version of himself.
Mjölnir (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is an enchanted hammer owned by Thor (and previously, Hela) and made of uru by the Dwarves of Nidavellir that is capable of controlling lightning and allows the user to fly if it is spun rapidly and released with enough power. Before Thor is banished to Earth, Odin enchants the hammer so that only those deemed "worthy" would be able to wield it and be granted the power of Thor, which include the Vision and Steve Rogers. An alternate version of the hammer is acquired by Thor during the
Time Heist, and is later returned to its original timeline by Rogers. The hammer is also used by
Jane Foster when she becomes the Mighty Thor in Thor: Love and Thunder.
The Nano Gauntlet,[203] also known as the Iron Gauntlet[204] or the Power Gauntlet,[205] is a right-handed metal gauntlet created by Tony Stark, Bruce Banner, and
Rocket using Stark nanotechnology. It was designed to harness the power of the Infinity Stones akin to the
Infinity Gauntlet and created to reverse
the Blip. After the Avengers retrieve alternate versions of the six Infinity Stones during the Time Heist, Smart Hulk uses it to snap his fingers and resurrect the lives of half the Universe before an alternate version of Thanos from 2014 arrives and attempts to acquire the Gauntlet for himself. During the subsequent
Battle of Earth, the gauntlet is passed around multiple individuals before ending up in the hands of Thanos, but the Stones are secretly removed by Tony Stark, who snaps his fingers and disintegrates Thanos and his army.
The Necroswords (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) were obsidian swords generated and handled by the Asgardian goddess of death,
Hela, powered with the necro-energy that she transforms from the power she draws from
Asgard. In Thor: Love and Thunder, All-Black the Necrosword is a powerful weapon wielded by the Dark Shadow Lord and later by
Gorr the God Butcher. Gorr obtained the sword from the deceased Shadow Lord and used it to slay his first god.
The Quad Blasters are
Peter Quill's primary weapons. The blasters have two separate triggers controlling two separate barrels, which are fired using the index and middle finger. The bottom barrel of each gun fires non-lethal electric shots, while the top barrel fires lethal plasma shots.
Prop master Russell Bobbitt created two sets of the blasters for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, which contained removable blaster cartridges.[209]
Reset charges are contraptions used by the
Time Variance Authority (TVA) to "prune" alternate timelines, erasing them from existence to preserve the Sacred Timeline.
Michael Waldron, the
head writer of Loki, said the charges use magic "or perhaps something a bit more technical", and that the audience is "kind of in the dark with what is exactly is going on with these reset charges".[210] They are later used by
Sylvie to "bomb" the Sacred Timeline.[211][212][213]
The Shocker's gauntlet is a mechanical weapon originally owned by
Brock Rumlow and ripped off by Steve Rogers in
Lagos. The gauntlet is then recovered by the
Department of Damage Control and stolen by
Adrian Toomes.
Phineas Mason modifies the gauntlet before passing it to
Jackson Brice, who uses the gauntlet while calling himself the "Shocker". After Brice is disintegrated, it is used by
Herman Schultz until his defeat at the hands of
Spider-Man. Visual effects for the gauntlet were provided by Trixter in Spider-Man: Homecoming.[7]
Shuri's gauntlets are a pair of vibranium
gauntlets designed and used by
Shuri. Shaped like a
panther's head, they emit a powerful sonic blast capable of subduing a Black Panther. They are ultimately destroyed by
Killmonger. After Killmonger's demise at the hands of her brother,
T'Challa, Shuri designs a second pair which she uses during the
Battle of Wakanda and the Battle of Earth.
Stormbreaker (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a large battle axe made of uru and forged by Thor and the dwarf king Eitri. The weapon, meant to be the most powerful in the Asgardian king's arsenal, has powers similar to Mjölnir and is also capable of summoning the Bifröst. Unlike Mjölnir, Stormbreaker has no worthiness enchantment, allowing anyone to wield it. Thor nearly dies trying to create it, but before its completion, so
Groot cuts off his own arm to hastily finish Stormbreaker and then Thor heals himself with the completed Stormbreaker. Thor then uses it to defeat the Outriders in Wakanda, attack Thanos, kill him on the
Garden, and during the Battle of Earth.[214]
The Ten Rings (based on the
Mandarin's rings from the Marvel Comics) are a set of ten mystical
iron rings used by
Wenwu and
Shang-Chi,[215] which provide the namesake and emblem for the criminal organization
of the same name.[216] The Rings grant their user enhanced strength and longevity, emit concussive energy blasts, and can be telepathically controlled as projectiles and tendrils.[215] The appearance of the aura projected by the rings varies on the user, with Wenwu's resembling violent blue lightning and Shang-Chi's resembling graceful orange flames to reflect their distinct personalities.[217][138] According to Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings producer
Jonathan Schwartz, the Rings were changed from being worn on the fingers as rings as in the comics to being worn on the wrists was due to its impracticality and similarity with the Infinity Stones.[218] Director
Destin Daniel Cretton also noted that more material regarding the Rings were created but purposely withheld so that they can be explored in future projects,[219] while the film's mid-credits scene was written to leave the Rings' origins ambiguous so that they can be explored in the future.[220] Visual effects for the Rings were provided by
Weta Digital in Shang-Chi, who originally gave the Rings different colors for every functionality;[221] Marvel Studios concept artist Jerad S. Marantz also considered making the Rings green.[222] The Ten Rings were later integrated into mainstream
Marvel Universe.[223]
Thanos' blade[1] is a large double-sided sword used by an alternate version of Thanos from 2014 during the Battle of Earth. Thanos uses it to break
Captain America's shield as well as
Luis' van before it is destroyed by Wanda Maximoff using her telekinetic powers. The blade's design was based on a helicopter used by Thanos in the comics,[224] an
easter egg which Thanos creator
Jim Starlin criticized.[225][226] Gamora kills Thanos in an alternate reality before seizing his armor and blade.[188]
Time Sticks[227] are
batons used by Minutemen of the Time Variance Authority (TVA) to "prune" variants.
Ravonna Renslayer, a former Hunter for the TVA, also wields a baton, which she uses against Loki and Sylvie. When designing the pruning effect for Loki, visual effects vendor
FuseFX sought to differentiate it from
the Blip, taking inspiration from the documentary series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey.[228]
The Ultron Sentries, also known as the Sub-Ultrons, are a large army of robots that acted as extensions of Ultron. They were created by Ultron using resources from the
Hydra Research Base in
Sokovia and were directly controlled by him, thus acting as his personal army. They were ultimately destroyed by the Avengers during the
Battle of Sokovia.
Ulysses Klaue's prosthetic arm is a
prosthetic arm used by
Ulysses Klaue after his arm was chopped off by Ultron. Actually a modified
Wakandan tool used for mining vibranium, it functioned as a
sonic cannon, capable of shooting out high-energy blasts powerful enough to destroy a car and temporarily subdue a
Black Panther. The sonic cannon could be retracted and hidden inside the prosthesis when not in use. It was later destroyed by
T'Challa during a skirmish in
Busan, Korea.
The Web-shooters (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) are a pair of
electromechanical gauntlets developed by Peter Parker for his use as the
crime-fighter known as
Spider-Man. They are capable of shooting synthetic webbing stored in small cartridges on the gauntlets. The first version of the Web-shooters, which were homemade by Parker, are upgraded by Tony Stark before the Avengers Civil War. This version has a variety of different settings, a capability first teased in the
mid-credits scene of Captain America: Civil War. This was compared by Spider-Man: Homecoming co-producer Eric Hauserman Carroll to a
DSLR camera.[42] Visual effects for the synthetic webbing were provided by
Digital Domain and
Sony Pictures Imageworks in Spider-Man: Homecoming, who based the design on
polar bear hair due to its
translucent nature as well as its design in Civil War and
previous Spider-Man films.[229] The
Iron Spider armor also features its own Web-shooters, which are more streamlined and technologically-advanced. After Stark's death, Peter uses his technology to craft himself a new pair after his old ones are destroyed.
The Widow's Bite (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is an electroshock weapon used by Natasha Romanoff in combat. Created by S.H.I.E.L.D., it delivers powerful electrical discharges from two gauntlets worn on the wrists. Tony Stark later creates a more powerful version for her, which causes the piping in her suit to light up and glow. It has been used by Romanoff to momentarily disable the
Winter Soldier's metal arm and the
Black Panther suit, as well as to attack other Black Widows in the
Red Room.
The Yaka arrow (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a sound-sensitive arrow owned by
Yondu Udonta. Made of Yaka metal by the Centaurians, it is controlled by a red fin worn on Yondu's head combined with his
whistling, and is carried in a holster on his belt when not in use. His use of the arrow is extremely skilled, allowing him to accurately control its direction and speed, killing multiple beings within seconds. After Yondu's death,
Kraglin acquires the arrow and a new cybernetic head fin, but struggles to control his arrow due to his lack of experience.
Artifacts
The Bloodstone is a red gem owned by the Bloodstone family, first wielded by
Ulysses Bloodstone. Following Ulysses' death, his widow
Verussa organizes a competition between monster hunters to determine its new wielder.[230][231] Verussa uses the Bloodstone to force
Jack Russell into his
werewolf form, who kills her, and the gem is left behind with Verussa and Ulysses' estranged daughter
Elsa.[232] The Bloodstone is the only object with color for the majority of Werewolf by Night, and grants its wielder increased strength and longevity.[233]
The Book of Cagliostro is an ancient spellbook housed in the
Ancient One's private library in
Kamar-Taj. The book focuses on
dark magic, causing many students who studied the book to lose their way.
Kaecilius tears pages out of the book to allow him to perform a ritual to contact
Dormammu and draw energy from the
Dark Dimension, extending his life forever.
Stephen Strange also studies the book, learning how to use the
Eye of Agamotto.
The Casket of Ancient Winters (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a relic owned and used by the
Frost Giants. When opened, it projects an icy wind that freezes everything in its path, and is capable of plunging an entire planet into a new ice age. The Casket is captured in 965 AD by the
Asgardians, who stored it in
Odin's vault. Over a millennium later, Frost Giants attack Asgard, seeking to reclaim the Casket, but are once again defeated. It is presumably destroyed during Ragnarök.
The Cloak of Levitation (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a magical relic that is enables its user to
levitate in the air. It is one of the many relics owned by the Masters of the Mystic Arts that are originally stored in the
New York Sanctum. It "chooses"
Stephen Strange as its master during a fight with
Kaecilius. It has a
consciousness of its own and is able to move independently and defend Strange against threats. It is later used by Strange during the
Battle of Titan and the
Battle of Earth. During the battle with the universe-displaced villains, the Cloak saves Ned Leeds' life when he falls off of the
Statue of Liberty, apparently of its own volition. Visual effects for the artifact were provided by
Framestore in Doctor Strange.[117]
The Crimson Bands of Cyttorak (based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name) is a magical wooden relic housed in the New York Sanctum. When thrown at an opponent, it restrains them, binding their hands behind their back, with Stephen Strange using it on Kaecilius in Doctor Strange. A second, more comics-accurate version is manifested during Strange's fight with Thanos, a spell that appears as red bands. Visual effects for the original version were provided by
Framestore in Doctor Strange.[117]
The Darkhold (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name), also known as the Book of the Damned, is a magical
grimoire that corrupts the reader and contains spells that the demon Chthon wrote on Mount Wundagore. The book passed through many hands before coming into the possession of
Agatha Harkness, who used it to determine that
Wanda Maximoff is the Scarlet Witch. After defeating Harkness, Maximoff took the book to study it while in hiding, unaware of the book's evils. As a result, the book causes Maximoff to become corrupted. After breaking out of the corruption, she destroys Wundagore and every copy of the Darkhold across the multiverse. The Book of Vishanti serves as the
antithesis to the Darkhold. The Darkhold's appearance in WandaVision was pitched by co-executive producer
Mary Livanos, who felt it would increase the level of danger posed by Harkness to Maximoff.[234] A visually distinct iteration of the book appears in the ABC series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and the Hulu series Runaways, in which it is used by
Holden Radcliffe and
Aida before
Robbie Reyes takes to the Dark Dimension with
Morgan le Fay later bringing it back to Earth.[235] While this had not been discussed by the writers of WandaVision,[236] director
Matt Shakman stated that he believes they are the same book.[237] The Darkhold was designed by the props team of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness for WandaVision,[238] and visual effects were created by
Luma Pictures.[239]
The Macchina di Kadavus,[240] also known as The Box,[241] is a relic owned and used by the
Masters of the Mystic Arts to contain potentially hazardous spells. In 2024, it is used by
Stephen Strange to contain the corrupted Runes of Kof-Kol, before it is destroyed by
Norman Osborn with a
pumpkin bomb, releasing the spell and creating rifts in the multiverse.
Sling Rings are small two-ring mystical artifacts used by the Masters of the Mystic Arts to teleport between different locations via an interdimensional portal.[242] Apart from these Masters, the sling ring is also worn and used by
Ned Leeds.
The Mind Stone, originally housed in
Loki's scepter and later on
Vision's forehead, is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of the
mind. It grants the user the ability to
control minds and give sentience to beings, as well as to project energy blasts. In 2015,
Tony Stark and
Bruce Banner use it to learn to create
Ultron, who later fuses the Stone on the Vision. Exposure to the Mind Stone also granted
Pietro Maximoff superhuman speed and amplified
Wanda's innate magical abilities. Her connection to the Stone also allows her to create a
simulacrum of Vision and two sons,
Billy and
Tommy.
The Power Stone, originally housed in the Orb and later in
Ronan's
Cosmi-Rod, is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of
power. It grants the user superhuman strength and durability, and is capable of overpowering
Carol Danvers.
The Reality Stone, originally in the form of the Aether (based on the classical element
of the same name), was the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of reality. It first appears in a fluid-like state, and grants the user the ability to change reality, create illusions, suck the life force out of mortals, disrupt the laws of physics, and repel any threats that it detects.
The Soul Stone, originally located on the planet
Vormir, is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of the
soul. It grants the user the ability to manipulate living souls, and also contains a pocket dimension called the
Soul World. Uniquely, it has a guard over its location, the Stonekeeper, who guides those through the ritual required to gain it: "a soul for a soul", via a sacrifice.
The Space Stone, originally housed in the Tesseract (based on the
Cosmic Cube from the Marvel Comics),[243] is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of
space. It grants the user the ability to open wormholes and to travel between places instantaneously, and has been used by
Johann Schmidt,
Loki, and
Thanos. The energy generated by the Stone is also used by the
Asgardians to repair the
Bifröst Bridge,
Hydra and
S.H.I.E.L.D. to power weapons, and
Project Pegasus to develop light-speed engines.
The Time Stone, originally housed in the Eye of Agamotto (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name), is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of time. It grants the user the ability to manipulate time and foresee possible futures. It has been used by
Stephen Strange, the
Ancient One, and Thanos.
Creatures
The Abilisk is an interdimensional
tentacled creature that feeds on
Anulax Batteries, the power source of the
Sovereign planetary amalgamation. In 2014, the
Sovereign people hire the
Guardians of the Galaxy to slay the beast, and the creature is killed when
Gamora uses her sword to slice it open.[244] In 2026, the Abilisks are revealed to have been created by the
High Evolutionary. They are seen when
Mantis,
Nebula, and
Drax are thrown in a chamber with them. Mantis calms them down and adopts them, taking them with her on her journey of self discovery. According to
head writerA.C. Bradley, the tentacled monster seen in the
first and
fourth episodes of What If...? was inspired by the Abilisk.[245]
Alioth (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is a cloud-like, matter-consuming entity which resides in the
Void and guards the
Citadel at the End of Time. Alioth was created during the first Multiversal War and was harnessed and weaponized by
He Who Remains to end the war.[246][247]Loki visual development artist Alexander Mandradjiev took inspiration from the anime film Princess Mononoke (1997) when designing Alioth.[248]
Alligator Loki is a
reptilian variant of
Loki which takes the form of an alligator.[249] It was pruned by the Time Variance Authority (TVA) and banished to the
Void. The character was included in Loki "because he's green", according to head writer
Michael Waldron, and was doubled by a stuffed alligator during filming to allow actors to interact with it.[250]
The Dweller-in-Darkness (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is a soul-consuming demon kept imprisoned for thousands of years by the people of
Ta Lo who impersonates Wenwu's deceased wife,
Ying Li, manipulating him into using the
Ten Rings to release it.[253] The Dweller kills Wenwu upon being freed, but is defeated by Shang-Chi. Visual effects for the creature were provided by
Weta Digital in Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, which supplemented its winged, tentacled, and eyeless appearance with a large jaw and tongue. Weta also drew inspiration from a variety of references for each part of its body, including crabs and horns for its armor, a mixture of
porous rock, rhinos and elephants for its skin, and
obsidian for its teeth.[217]
Fenris (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is a 23-foot-tall wolf owned by
Hela, who resurrects it using the
Eternal Flame following her release from
Hel.[254][255] She charges at
Heimdall, preparing to fight him, but is attacked by the
Hulk, who ultimately throws her off
Asgard and into space. Visual effects for the creature in Thor: Ragnarok were provided by
Framestore, which used camera angles and tight framing to communicate her enormous size.[103]
Gargantos (based on
Shuma-Gorath from the Marvel Comics)[256] is an interdimensional octopus-like being sent by
Wanda Maximoff to pursue
America Chavez with the aim of stealing her ability to travel the multiverse. Gargantos and Shuma-Gorath are two different creatures in the comics, with the film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness referring to the creature as Gargantos because the rights to the name Shuma-Gorath are owned by
Heroic Signatures.[257] Its eye was modeled after that of Olsen's to foreshadow her role as the film's antagonist.[258]
The Great Protector is a water
dragon which acts as the guardian of Ta Lo. Thousands of years ago, the Great Protector and the people of Ta Lo sealed the
Dweller-in-Darkness within the Dark Gate. When the Dweller escapes its seal, the Great Protector defeats it with the help of Shang-Chi,
Katy and
Xialing. The Great Protector can bestow her power onto people, giving them the ability to manipulate wind; and her scales can be fashioned into weapons and armor that are effective against the Dweller's forces. A life-sized replica of the dragon's head was built for the production of Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, which Weta Digital then digitally added visual effects to.[259] Weta also based the dragon's eyes on those of
Fala Chen, who portrays
Ying Li in the film,[260] and referenced
sea snakes and eels when designing her flight movements.[217]
Goose (based on
Chewie from the Marvel Comics) is a
Flerken and
Mar-Vell's pet during her time on Earth. In the 1990s, she is found by
Carol Danvers at the
Joint Dark Energy Mission Facility and adopted by
Nick Fury. With the ability to deploy long tentacles from inside her mouth as well as store objects in her stomach, she single-handedly takes out a squad of
Kree soldiers and blinds Fury's left eye with a scratch. In 2018, Goose survived
the Blip, and was taken in under Danvers' care. In 2026, during Danvers's team-up with Monica Rambeau and Kamala Khan, Goose is overseen by the agents of S.A.B.E.R., and begins breeding Flerken eggs around the station, giving birth to numerous offsprings which eventually help evacuate the agents when the S.A.B.E.R. station begins to collapse. She was introduced in Captain Marvel and returned in The Marvels. Hand-drawn pictures of her were seen in Ms. Marvel and she was mentioned on Fury's file in Secret Invasion. An alternate version of Goose also appears in the animated series
What If...? episode "
What If... Peter Quill Attacked Earth's Mightiest Heroes?".
Lucky the Pizza Dog (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is
Kate Bishop's pet dog. In December 2024, he was rescued by Bishop in New York City and adopted by her. He then stayed with her and
Clint Barton for a few days until they all moved to Barton's house in Iowa. Kate Bishop relocated to a new apartment in New York City, taking Lucky with her. One night, Lucky witnessed
Kamala Khan break into the place while Bishop was out. When Bishop returned, she gave Lucky a slice of pizza, which he happily ate as Khan introduced herself to Bishop.[261] He was introduced in Hawkeye,[262][263] and reappeared in The Marvels.[261]
Morris (voiced by
Dee Baker)[264] is a six-legged, faceless
hundun who befriends
Trevor Slattery during his imprisonment by the
Ten Rings.[265] Morris later escapes with Slattery, Shang-Chi, Katy, and Xialing and leads them to his home, Ta Lo. The creature was inspired by Shang-Chi director
Destin Daniel Cretton's 15-year-old
dachshund of the same name, and was doubled by a green-screen cushion during filming; the creatives of the film found it difficult to make Morris cute due to it not having eyes or a face to convey emotion, leading them to rely on its fur, feathers, and voice.[266][138] Visual effects for the creature were provided by
Trixter in Shang-Chi, who looked at
wombats and puppies for inspiration.[138][217]
Throg (voiced by
Chris Hemsworth and based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name)[142][268] is a variant of Thor who is turned into a frog at one point in his life. Shortly after this occurred, he is detained by the Time Variance Authority (TVA) in a transparent container and sent to the Void.
Magic
Asgardian magic is a type of magic that is practiced by
Asgardian sorcerers such as
Loki,
Frigga,
Sylvie,
Odin,
Thor and
Heimdall. This form of magic has many colors, with Loki's and Sylvie's magic being a bright green and Thor's being
lightning based.
The Odinforce (based on the Marvel Comics energy
of the same name) is a powerful mystical energy used by Odin in his capacity as King of Asgard. It is the source of power for his spear,
Gungnir, also passed down through the Kings of Asgard, and is the power source and weapon of the
Destroyer. It is periodically replenished by entering the Odinsleep, a state that leaves the user vulnerable. The parts of the disabled Destroyer are later assembled into a prototype gun.
Chaos magic is an extremely powerful and rare form of magic that gives the user the ability to alter reality, wielded by
Wanda Maximoff, thus making her the
Scarlet Witch, a being once thought to be mythical. This form of magic's primary color is red mixed with white and black hues.
Dark magic is a type of magic that harnesses energies from the Dark Dimension, practiced by
Agatha Harkness, Morgan la Fey, Nico Minoru,
Kaecilius and his Zealots, and the
Ancient One. In the case of Nico and Kaecilius's group, the usage of this form of magic without protection is corrosive with the latter forming a direct link to Dormammu. Asgardians like
Odin and
Heimdall can use it. A darker version of Stephen Strange dubbed "
Doctor Strange Supreme" also practices dark magic. This form of magic's color is either red or purple.
E.D.I.T.H. (voiced by Dawn Michelle King), which stands for Even Dead, I'm the Hero, is an advanced
augmented realityartificial intelligence with numerous security, defense and tactical abilities created by
Tony Stark and built into
his pair of sunglasses. Following his death, the sunglasses are handed over to
Peter Parker, giving him access to the AI as well as
Stark Industries' large arsenal of missiles and weaponized drones.
Griot (voiced by
Trevor Noah)[271][272] is
Shuri's artificial intelligence. The name "
Griot" is a West African term for a historian or storyteller.[273]
J.A.R.V.I.S. (voiced by
Paul Bettany) is a complex artificial intelligence matrix created by Tony Stark and named after his father's butler,
Edwin Jarvis.[274] It is used by Stark to operate his technology,
his mansion,
Avengers Tower, and his company.[275] While he is eventually destroyed by
Ultron, his operational matrix is uploaded by Stark and
Bruce Banner into a new body, becoming the
Vision.[276] According to the novelization of the first Iron Man film, the acronym stands for Just A Rather Very Intelligent System.[277]
Karen (voiced by
Jennifer Connelly), initially called "Suit Lady", is the name given by Peter Parker for the natural-language user interface created by Tony Stark and embedded in his second
Spider-Man suit.[278] Originally hidden until Parker had completed the
Training Wheels Protocol, Karen is unlocked by
Ned Leeds after he hacks into the suit, and is destroyed along with the suit following an attack by
Mysterio in Europe. Spider-Man: Homecoming co-writer
Jonathan Goldstein was initially skeptical of the idea, feeling that it was too similar to J.A.R.V.I.S. and F.R.I.D.A.Y.[279]
K.E.V.I.N. (voiced by an uncredited
Brian T. Delaney), which stands for Knowledge Enhanced Visual Interconnectivity Nexus, is an advanced
artificial intelligence which in She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is revealed to be the mastermind behind all Marvel Cinematic Universe storyline decisions. She-Hulk had to go through Marvel Studios: Assembled on the
Disney+ app to file a complaint to K.E.V.I.N. about the confusing storyline done in her show's final episode. It is depicted as operating through a robot in a secure room inside Marvel Studios where the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe can be surveyed simultaneously. Elements of the robot and A.I., including its name, call back to Marvel Studios President
Kevin Feige, who helped the show's head writer
Jessica Gao with the show's season finale.[280]
Mainframe (voiced by
Miley Cyrus and then by
Tara Strong and based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name), is an artificial intelligence and a leader of Mainframe Ravager Clan, as well as a member of Stakar Ogord's Team.
The Supreme Intelligence (portrayed by various actors and based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name) is an artificial intelligence that is the ruler of the
Kree.[295][296] The Supreme Intelligence takes the physical form of the individual most respected by whoever is speaking to it when the person is hooked up to it. To
Vers, it takes the form of Dr.
Wendy Lawson (portrayed by
Annette Bening), though Vers was initially unaware of who Lawson is due to her
amnesia.[297] A deleted scene had the Supreme Intelligence assuming the form of
Yon-Rogg (portrayed by
Jude Law) when chastising him, reflecting his
ego.[298] In 1995, the Supreme Intelligence sends Vers on a mission to Torfa to extract an undercover Kree operative, but the mission backfires and Vers is captured by a
Skrull faction led by
Talos. After Vers regains her memories and learns her true identity, she fights the Supreme Intelligence before defeating the
Starforce.
Elements
Uru (based on the Marvel Comics element
of the same name) is a metal used by the
Dwarves to forge the weapons
Mjölnir and
Stormbreaker, and the
Infinity Gauntlet. It has magical properties. The metal is forged in the furnaces of
Nidavellir as it is so powerful that only the heat of a dying star can melt it.
Vibranium (based on the Marvel Comics element
of the same name) is a metal used to create
Captain America's shield, the
Black Panther suit, the
Vision,
Sam Wilson's Captain America suit and the
Winter Soldier's cybernetic arm. It came from a
meteorite collision with Earth and is regarded as the strongest metal in the world, stronger than steel and a third of the weight.[299] The Wakandans originally hid it for years, and it thus became rare and extremely expensive, allowing vibranium smugglers such as
Ulysses Klaue to make billions of dollars. Vibranium is also shown to be
bulletproof to most high-caliber
bullets.[299] It is also absorbent of sound, vibration, and
kinetic energy, and can deflect high-energy blasts.[300] Its main source is Mount Bashenga in
Wakanda, but it is eventually revealed at least a few other meteorites brought vibranium in small amounts to other parts of the world.
Projects and initiatives
The Avengers Initiative, originally known as the Protector Initiative, is the initiative for gathering a group of superheroes from various backgrounds, described as "a group of remarkable people", into the
Avengers, to protect Earth from various threats. It was initiated by
Nick Fury in the 1990s and was renamed in honor of Carol Danvers'
call sign, "Avenger". In 2011, Fury directs
Natasha Romanoff to measure
Tony Stark's suitability for the initiative, though Stark was initially rejected and only used as a consultant. Fury also recruits
Steve Rogers,
Bruce Banner, and
Thor, and also assigns
S.H.I.E.L.D. agents Romanoff and
Clint Barton to the team.
Cataract is a project conducted by
S.W.O.R.D. with the goal of reactivating the
Vision as a "sentient weapon" following his death at the hands of
Thanos during the
Infinity War. Under Acting Director
Tyler Hayward's orders, S.W.O.R.D. acquires the Vision's body following the Battle of Wakanda and dismantles it, hoping to study its components and rebuild it. Though initially unsuccessful, S.W.O.R.D. uses energy collected from
Wanda Maximoff on a
Stark Industries drone to reactivate the Vision, turning his body white in the process.
Project Rebirth (based on
Weapon I from the Marvel Comics), also known as the Super Soldier Program, is a collaboration between U.S., British and German scientists led by Dr.
Abraham Erskine under the supervision of
Peggy Carter,
Howard Stark, and
Chester Phillips to create a new breed of super-soldiers. The first successful test leads to the creation of Captain America by enhancing the sickly
Steve Rogers, but is abandoned following the assassination of Erskine by
Heinz Kruger.
The Red Room (based on the Marvel Comics program
of the same name), also known as the Black Widow Program, is a top-secret Soviet (and later Russian) training program led by
Dreykov. The program takes young orphan girls and turns them into elite assassins named "Black Widows", and is overseen by various individuals, including Madame B. and
Melina Vostokoff. Graduates of the program include
Natasha Romanoff and
Yelena Belova. It was terminated in 2016 following the destruction of the Red Room's headquarters. In an alternate universe seen in What If...?, the Red Room captures Steve Rogers in 1953 and brainwashes him into being an assassin rather than Hydra brainwashing Bucky Barnes. During a final confrontation between the brainwashed Rogers, the Black Widows, led by Vostokoff, and Romanoff and Captain Carter, Carter manages to break through to Rogers who destroys the Red Room's headquarters, seemingly at the cost of his own life.
The Sokovia Accords (based on the
Registration Acts from the Marvel Comics), officially titled the Sokovia Accords: Framework for the Registration and Deployment of Enhanced Individuals,[303] are a group of legislative
documents ratified by the United Nations (UN), with the support of 117 countries, following the
Battle of Sokovia. They establish UN oversight over the Avengers, and were supported by Tony Stark, James Rhodes, the Vision, T'Challa, and Natasha Romanoff and opposed by Steve Rogers, Sam Wilson, and Clint Barton, leading to the
Avengers Civil War.
The Ultron Program is an attempt by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner to create an artificial intelligence, "
Ultron", as a means of protecting the world against incoming extraterrestrial threats. The program becomes a failure, with the program being infected due to the Mind Stone and turning genocidal, seeking to wipe out the
human race.
The Winter Soldier Program is a top secret
Hydra super-soldier program started by
Nazi scientist Dr.
Arnim Zola in the 1940s. It took soldiers, brainwashed them, and enhanced them with a recreation of the
Super Soldier Serum, turning them into a deadly assassins known as "Winter Soldiers", who were kept in
cryostasis whilst not on a mission. Each soldier had a set of codewords, recorded in the
Winter Soldier Book, which, when recited to a Winter Soldier, would make them completely obedient to that person. The Winter Soldiers, with the exception of
Bucky Barnes, are later executed by
Helmut Zemo.
Terms and phrases
"Avengers, assemble!" is a rallying cry for the
Avengers.
The Black Widow antidote is a red-colored synthetic gas stored in vials which acts as the antidote to the chemical mind-control that the Red Room employs on its Black Widows and
Taskmaster, created by a rogue former Black Widow.
Yelena Belova and
Natasha Romanoff acquire the antidote in 2016 and use it to free various Widows.
The Heart-shaped herb is a
Wakandan plant enriched through exposure to
vibranium, giving it a glowing purple color. It is ingested in a ceremony by the new Black Panther, granting them superhuman abilities. It also allows for the communication with the dead in the
Ancestral Plane upon ingestion. After becoming King of Wakanda,
N'Jadaka ingests the herb and orders the rest of the stocks to be incinerated. One of them is extracted by
Nakia, who uses it to heal
T'Challa. Shuri laters attempts to develop a synthetic Heart-shaped herb, eventually succeeding and allowing her to receive the same enhancements that N'Jadaka and T'Challa had acquired.
Pym Particles (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) are extradimensional subatomic particles capable of reducing or increasing the distance between atoms, allowing the user to shrink or grow. The formula for the particles was created by
Hank Pym and they appear in the form of a liquid stored in vials. They appear red when used to shrink and blue when used to grow. The particles also power Pym Discs and the
Wasp's blasters, and are used by the
Avengers to time-travel via the Quantum Realm during the
Time Heist.
The Super Soldier Serum (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a serum used to enhance humans to the peak of human perfection. It was originally developed by Dr.
Abraham Erskine and was given to
Johann Schmidt (turning him into the
Red Skull) and
Steve Rogers (turning him into
Captain America). After Erksine's death, numerous other versions of the serum are created with varying degrees of success. Hydra used a version of the serum to transform Bucky Barnes into the
Winter Soldier, and later used variants of the serum taken from Howard Stark after
his assassination to enhance other assassins as well, but the program fails and is shut down. Another serum was given to
Isaiah Bradley by the
U.S. government during the
Cold War, allowing him to confront and defeat the Winter Soldier in combat.
Bruce Banner tried to replicate the serum using
gamma radiation as a substitute for vita radiation, turning him into the Hulk. Meanwhile, a more successful version of the serum was given to
Emil Blonsky by the U.S. government, and Dr. Wilfred Nagel replicated the serum and gave them to the
Power Broker until they were stolen by
Karli Morgenthau and the Flag Smashers. Helmut Zemo later destroys all but one of the vials, which is taken by
John Walker.
Technologies
The Arc reactor is an energy source originally designed by
Howard Stark and
Anton Vanko, and later independently built by their sons,
Tony and
Ivan. It was initially designed as part of an attempt to replicate the
Tesseract's energy based on Howard's study of the object. Tony Stark eventually builds two versions—a large industrial reactor for powering his machines at the
Stark Industries Headquarters, and a miniature version embedded in his chest to power
his armor (also known as an RT) and prevent the
shrapnel from reaching his heart. The first miniature version used a
palladium core, although he later synthesizes
a new element when the palladium begins to poison him. He continues to develop the reactor throughout the years (even after the shrapnel is removed from his body), with the final version containing nanobots that make up his armor. Ivan Vanko,
James Rhodes, and
Pepper Potts also use arc reactors in their armors.
Max Dillon from an alternate universe also briefly uses one before it is removed by
Otto Octavius, also from an alternate universe and takes it back with him to his reality.[304]
B.A.R.F., which stands for Binarily Augmented Retro-Framing, is a
holographic technology created by
Quentin Beck during his time at
Stark Industries. Despite the technology's potential, Stark used the technology for therapeutic purposes and gave it a deliberately humorous name, humiliating and disgusting Beck. After he is fired for his unstable nature, Beck further developed the technology and equipped drones with advanced holographic projectors to create large monsters known as
Elementals.
Dum-E is Tony Stark's
automatedhydraulic arm. Built by a young Stark in his father Howard's garage, it acts as his workshop assistant, and often "hands" him things, such as bringing his arc reactor when Stark was unable to reach it due to having his previous one stolen by
Obadiah Stane. However, Dum-E has also often been of annoyance to Stark.[305] In 2013, it is severely damaged by
Aldrich Killian's attack on
his mansion and later pulled out of the wreckage and hauled away by Stark. By 2024, it has been fully repaired and moved into
Happy Hogan's apartment.[306]
Kimoyo Beads are an advanced piece of technology developed by
Shuri and used in
Wakanda. They are made to serve a vast range of purposes according to the needs of the wearer, such as deprogramming
Bucky Barnes.
Nick Fury's pager is a
pager belonging to
Nick Fury that was upgraded by
Carol Danvers before she left Earth. With the new enhancements, it could now contact her no matter where she was in the galaxy, although he was only to use it in the event of an emergency. Nick Fury activates it for the first time in years during
the Blip, prompting Danvers to return to Earth and meet the surviving Avengers.
Peter Quill's Walkman is a
Sony TPS-L2 Walkman given to
Peter Quill by his mother,
Meredith, when he was a child. It contained a
cassette tape titled Awesome Mix Vol. 1 which included a series of songs from the
1960s and
1970s, incorporated by Guardians of the Galaxy director
James Gunn as "cultural reference points" to remind audiences of Quill's Earthly origins.[307][308] Deeply cherished by Quill, he happened to have his Walkman on him when abducted by
Yondu, which he continued to listen to during his adult years. Following the
Battle of Xandar, Quill opens a gift from his mother, which is revealed to be another
mixtape titled Awesome Mix Vol. 2, described by Gunn as "better" and "more diverse" than Vol. 1.[309][310] After his Walkman is destroyed by
Ego, Kraglin gives him a
Zune formerly owned by Yondu as a replacement, a scene which
Microsoft was displeased with.[311][312]
The Quantum Tunnel is an inter-dimensional gateway designed by
Hank Pym,
Bill Foster, and
Elihas Starr to transport individuals to and from the
Quantum Realm. Six versions of the tunnel have been created over time: the first incarnation was built by Pym, Foster, and Starr but was destroyed in an explosion; a second version of the tunnel was used by Pym and
Hope van Dyne to rescue
Janet van Dyne from the Quantum Realm; a third version was placed inside
Luis' van and used to send
Scott Lang into the Quantum Realm to acquire quantum energy to heal
Ava Starr; a fourth tunnel designed by Tony Stark, Bruce Banner, and Rocket was used by the
Avengers to travel back in time to collect the six
Infinity Stones in alternate timelines; a fifth was created shortly after the
Battle of Earth by Banner to send
Steve Rogers back in time to return the
Infinity Stones and
Mjölnir back to their respective timelines; and a sixth tunnel was used by
Leo Fitz,
Jemma Simmons, and
Enoch to travel across different timelines.
Redwing (based on the Marvel Comics animal
of the same name), officially designated the Stark Drone MK82 922 V 80Z V2 Prototype Unit V6,[313] is an advanced
drone used in combat and
reconnaissance by
Sam Wilson. It was originally designed by
Stark Industries after Wilson joins the
Avengers, and was equipped into his
EXO-7 Falcon suit. In 2023, Wilson acquires a new version of the drone along with a new combat suit, but the drone is destroyed by
Karli Morgenthau. Wilson later uses a new version of the drone along with
his uniform as Captain America, both designed in Wakanda.
The Regeneration Cradle is a piece of medical equipment created by Dr.
Helen Cho that is able to heal serious injuries by grafting artificial tissue onto them.
Clint Barton's life is saved through this treatment.
Ultron later brainwashes Dr. Cho using
Loki's scepter into grafting the tissue to the
Mind Stone and
vibranium to create a new body for himself. The Avengers intervene, and with
Thor's help, the new body is awoken and dubbed the "
Vision".
TemPads are devices used by the
Time Variance Authority (TVA) to travel through time. Their interface was inspired by
SNES video games and
Game Boys, with Loki director
Kate Herron describing them as "the closest thing to our phones" that the TVA has.[314] The TemPads create Time Doors, amber-colored
interdimensional portals used by the TVA to travel between alternate timelines to preserve the Sacred Timeline. They can also lead to Time Cells, where prisoners are forever stuck in
time loops and the Doors are colored red.
FuseFX, which provided the portals' visual effects for the first season of Loki, explained that this color change was to reflect the amount of suffering which
Loki undergoes when inside the Time Cells.[315]
Thor's prosthetic eye is a
bionic eye that he wears in his left eye socket, replacing the organic one gouged out by Hela. He is given it by Rocket, who stole it from one of Yondu's Ravagers, Vorker, who takes the eye out when he sleeps. Rocket stored it in his rectum until giving it to Thor. The eye has a brown
iris, in contrast to Thor's natural blue eyes.
The Time-Keepers (voiced by
Jonathan Majors[316] and based on the Marvel Comics characters
of the same name) were three
androids created by
He Who Remains to pose as the creators of the Time Variance Authority (TVA). Believed to be alive by workers of the TVA, statues of them and their likenesses are featured in several locations throughout the
TVA's headquarters. Majors voicing both the Time-Keepers and their controller He Who Remains is a reference to The Wizard of Oz (1939).[316]
Tony Stark's glasses are a pair of technologically advanced sunglasses created by him. They are able to polarize and contain his AI
F.R.I.D.A.Y. After his death, F.R.I.D.A.Y. is replaced by
E.D.I.T.H., passing into the hands of Peter Parker. Parker passes them on to Quentin Beck, who uses them to better control his illusions, before reacquiring them in London.
The Universal Neural Teleportation Network[317] is the universal system for space travel. The system enables spaceships to travel through hexagonal-shaped wormholes known as jump points to
instanteneously travel between planetary systems.[318] According to Yondu, it is not healthy for a
mammalian lifeform to go through more than fifty jumps at once, which will result in extreme discomfort and
temporary disfigurement for those on board.[319] By 2024, a
S.A.B.E.R. space station has been established outside Earth, near a jump point.[320]
The Bifröst Bridge (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name), often simply referred to as the Bifröst, is an energy that allows for near-instantaneous travel via a
wormhole, used primarily for travel within the
Nine Realms by
Asgardians. The energy is harnessed using the
Rainbow Bridge, which connected to
Himinbjörg.
Loki intends to use this to destroy
Jotunheim, proving himself worthy of the throne to Odin, but his plans are foiled after
Thor destroys the Rainbow Bridge. The Bridge is later repaired using the
Tesseract, but destroyed again during
Ragnarok. The energy can also be generated through
dark magic and using
Stormbreaker. Visual effects of the Bifröst in Thor were influenced by
Hubble photography as well as other images of deep space,[114] and were done by
BUF Compagnie and
Fuel VFX.[329][330]
The Captain America PSAs are a series of
public service announcements starring
Captain America dressed in
his 2012 suit.[331]The President's Challenge served as an inspiration for one of the videos centered on "Captain America's Fitness Challenge", with Spider-Man: Homecoming director
Jon Watts believing that Captain America would be the obvious version of that in the MCU.[332] Another PSA discussed
school detention and
puberty, which became an
internet meme following the release of Homecoming.[333][334] A
post-credits scene of that film features a third PSA video of Rogers lecturing the audience on the value of patience, a
meta-reference to the fact that the film's audience had waited through the film's credits just to see that scene and a "last-minute addition" to the film.[335][336] Five additional PSAs featuring Avengers were conceived but ultimately unrealized.[337][338]
The Contest of Champions (based on the Marvel Comics storyline
of the same name) is a gladiator tournament held on
Sakaar by the
Grandmaster. His tower displays models of the heads of past champions, which resemble
Man-Thing,
Ares,
Bi-Beast, Dark-Crawler,
Fin Fang Foom, and
Beta Ray Bill from the comics in addition to the
Hulk.[339][340] Other gladiators include Thor,
Korg, and
Miek. Loki lands on the planet as well but is able to ingratiate himself with the Grandmaster and watches the games from his private
box. When designing the gladiator arena on Sakaar for Thor: Ragnarok, production designer
Dan Hennah studied
Roman gladiators and decided to go "all alien with it", surrounding the arena with "standing up bleachers".[112]
The Elementals (based on the Marvel Comics team
of the same name) are a series of illusions created by the use of projectors and drones used by
Quentin Beck to wreak havoc across the world. To mask their nature, Beck claimed that the Elementals were superpowered entities from Earth-833 that emerged from an inter-dimensional rift caused by the Snap. This iteration consists of the Wind, Earth, Fire, and Water Elementals; who are modeled after
Cyclone,
Sandman,
Molten Man, and
Hydro-Man respectively.[341] Quentin Beck, operating under the guise of Mysterio, claimed that they were born in a black hole and ravaged his reality of Earth-833. After Mysterio defeats the Wind and Earth Elementals
off-screen, he goes on to fight the Water Elemental in Venice while
Nick Fury and
Maria Hill persuade
Spider-Man to help Mysterio defeat the Fire Elemental in Prague. After finding a holographic projector, Peter Parker and
MJ learn the truth and are hunted down by Beck and his accomplices, who create an Elemental fusion monster to distract the world while he sets out to kill them. His plans are foiled when Spider-Man deactivates the drones.
The Emergence is an
apocalyptic event that results in a new
Celestial being born after being incubated in a
planet's core for millennia while the planet's
native population flourishes on the surface. Once a planet's population reaches a suitable amount, the Celestial bursts through the planet's
mantle and
crust, destroying its egg along with its inhabitants to propagate life elsewhere in the Universe.[342] A group of ten
Eternals are sent by the Celestial
Arishem to Earth to eradicate the invasive
Deviants and ensure the continual growth and advancement of Earth's population, but they instead develop a love for humanity and prevent the Emergence of the Celestial
Tiamut after
the Blip temporarily delays the event.[343]
Killmonger's scars are a series of around 3000 self-inflicted "
crocodile scars" covering
Erik "Killmonger" Stevens' body. Each one represents a confirmed kill from his time as an American
black opsNavy SEAL. The scars are intended to resemble the scar tattoos of the
Mursi and
Surma tribes,[344] and consisted of 90 individually sculpted silicone molds that took two-and-a-half hours to apply.[345]Michael B. Jordan, who portrays Killmonger, had to sit in a sauna for two hours at the end of the day to remove the prosthetics when filming Black Panther.[177]
Look Out for the Little Guy is a memoir written by
Scott Lang sometime after
the Blip, chronicling his adventures as an
Avenger.[348][349] Lang spends much of his time post-Blip conducting
book signings, which infuriates his daughter
Cassie.[350][351] As part of a
viral marketing campaign in promotion for Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania,
Hyperion Avenue announced it would publish a real-life version of Look Out for the Little Guy in September 2023, featuring "over 20 short pieces exploring different aspects of [Lang]'s experiences" as a father and Avenger.[352] That book was written by author
Rob Kutner and Quantumania screenwriter
Jeff Loveness.[353]
Mahd Wy'ry is a
psychotic episode which affects
Thena, causing her to seemingly lose control and attack her teammates. Mistakenly believed by the Eternals to be a form of
dementia affecting her
perception of time due to her enormous amount of memory,
Gilgamesh volunteers to be her guardian and lives
off-the-grid with her in Australia for hundreds of years.[354] The Eternals eventually learn that the condition is actually a result of Thena recalling memories from her past missions, which had supposedly been erased from their minds by Arishem.[155] Thena actress
Angelina Jolie and her Eternals co-star
Salma Hayek found this element of the story moving, comparing the condition to women suffering from
mental illnesses.[355]
Steve Rogers' notebook is a small
notebook originally belonging to
Steve Rogers which he used to keep a list of notable items, people, events, and
pop culture elements which he missed during his time in
suspended animation. The things noted on the list vary by the region where Captain America: The Winter Soldier was released.[364] Later, the notebook was passed on to Rogers' best friend,
Bucky Barnes, who used it to keep a list of people whom he had
wronged during
his time as the Winter Soldier.[365][366] Eventually, after Barnes finishes making amends with everyone on the list, he leaves the notebook with his therapist, Dr. Christina Raynor, thanking her for her help.[367]
WandaVision is a sitcom broadcast by
Wanda Maximoff in the
Westview anomaly using her
Chaos Magic abilities. Set in the town of
Westview, New Jersey, the sitcom centered on Wanda Maximoff's family, which included the
Vision,
Billy Maximoff, and
Tommy Maximoff. It also "starred"
Agatha Harkness as Agnes,
Ralph Bohner as
Pietro Maximoff,
Monica Rambeau as Geraldine, Todd and Sharon Davis as Arthur and Mrs. Hart, Abilash Tandon as Norm, Harold and Sarah Proctor as Phil and Dottie Jones, John Collins as Herb, Isabel Matsueda as Beverly, an unknown actor as Dennis, and
Darcy Lewis as an unnamed character. The show was ultimately "
canceled" by Wanda (as described by
Tyler Hayward) after her actions were discovered by the Vision and S.W.O.R.D. and she expanded the Hex to save the Vision's "life".
The Winter Soldier Book is a book formerly used by
Hydra which contained Russian trigger words that would activate their Winter Soldiers into deadly assassins when spoken. It was later discovered by
Helmut Zemo and used to activate Barnes into the Winter Soldier, using the words from the book: "Longing, rusted, seventeen, daybreak, furnace, nine, benign, homecoming, one, freight car".[a] The trigger words' effect is eventually nullified after Barnes is healed in Wakanda.
The Kree–Skrull War (995 AD–present) (based on the Marvel Comics storyline
of the same name) is an ongoing thousand-year-long conflict between the
Kree and
Skrulls, with the Kree striving to wipe out the entire Skrull race.[368] In the 20th Century, the Kree scientist
Mar-Vell rebels and travels to Earth to help Skrull refugees escape from Kree forces and later assists
Carol Danvers.
The Cold War (1947–1991) was a period of
geopolitical tension between the United States and the
Soviet Union during which the U.S. experimented with the Super Soldier Serum on Black soldiers, resulting in the creation of the super-soldier
Isaiah Bradley. Meanwhile, Hydra (having infiltrated the Soviet Union) establishes the
Winter Soldier Program and the
Red Room, transforming
Bucky Barnes and
Natasha Romanoff into elite assassins.
The assassination of Howard and Maria Stark (1991) was the murder of
Howard and
Maria Stark by a brainwashed Bucky Barnes under Vasily Karpov's control on December 16, 1991, in
Long Island, New York. When the couple are on their way to
the Pentagon, Barnes arrives on a motorcycle and slashes the front tire of their car, causing it to crash before
beating Howard to death and
strangling Maria. The assassination is covered as a car crash, results in
Obadiah Stane assuming control of
Stark Industries, and is used by
Helmut Zemo to instigate tensions between
Tony Stark and Steve Rogers during the
Avengers Civil War.
The Battle of Sokovia (2015) was a battle in Sokovia between the Avengers and Ultron, with Ultron attempting to cause
human extinction by dropping the capital city of Sokovia on Earth. The plan is foiled after the city is destroyed by the Avengers, and Ultron is killed by the
Vision. In an alternate reality explored in
the eighth episode of What If...?, Ultron successfully transfers his consciousness to the Vision's body and gains the power of the
Infinity Stones.[378]
The Blip (2018–2023) was the five-year period between the
extermination of half of all life in the universe by Thanos and their subsequent resurrection by Bruce Banner.[381] It manifested in the form of the mass disintegration of individual beings into ashes, while the reversal had the same ashes reforming into the previously deceased individuals, who mostly reappeared in the same location with no direct awareness of what occurred. The
Global Repatriation Council (GRC) is later set up to aid those displaced by the Blip, although many such as the
Flag Smashers oppose their efforts.
The Battle of Earth (2023) was a large-scale battle that took place in the ruins of the
Avengers Compound between the Avengers,
Guardians of the Galaxy,
Masters of the Mystic Arts,
Asgardians,
Ravagers, and
Wakandans and alternate versions of
Thanos and his army from 2014. After defeating
Tony Stark,
Thor, and
Steve Rogers, Thanos summons his army from the Sanctuary II with the goal of acquiring the Nano Gauntlet, but is interrupted by the arrival of the restored Guardians, Asgardians, Ravagers, and Wakandans. The two sides clash, and the battle culminates with Stark sacrificing himself to disintegrate Thanos and his army.
^On the Frontline: An Inside Look at Captain America's Battlegrounds (Featurette). Captain America: The Winter Soldier Blu-Ray:
Walt Disney Home Entertainment. 2014.
Avengers Tower (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name),[8] formerly known as Stark Tower, is a skyscraper located in
Manhattan, New York City.[9] The building is originally owned by Stark Industries before serving as the headquarters of the Avengers until the Battle of Sokovia.[10] Tony Stark later sells the building to an unnamed buyer,[11] whose identity remains unknown as of Hawkeye.[12] Alternate versions of the building are seen in the
Void and a universe where
Ultron defeats the Avengers.[13][14]Avengers: Age of Ultron production designer Charles Wood built an enormous set for the film, one of the largest sets ever built for an MCU film, which featured multiple connected environments and levels.[15]
Camp Lehigh is a military training facility located in the fictional town of Wheaton,
New Jersey formerly belonging to the
United States Army which also acts as one of the bases of the
Strategic Scientific Reserve during World War II. Following the war, it is taken over by
S.H.I.E.L.D., with
Howard Stark and
Hank Pym performing research there while
Arnim Zola secretly uploads his consciousness into a series of computers.[18] In 2014, the camp is destroyed by a S.H.I.E.L.D. missile sent by Hydra. Years later, it is rebuilt and in 2025, hosts the first AvengerCon, attended by
Kamala Khan.
Clint Barton's farmhouse, also known as the "
safe house", is the private residence of
Clint Barton and his family. In 2015, Barton brings the Avengers to his house in order to take refuge. They are joined by
Nick Fury who gives them a motivational talk. Sometime after, the family relocates to another house. In 2018, Barton's family fall victim to
the Blip outside the house. In 2023, Barton returns to his house and is reunited with his restored family. In 2024, Barton brings
Kate Bishop and her dog,
Lucky, to the house to celebrate Christmas with his family.[citation needed]
The Golden Dagger Club[23] (based on the
Golden Daggers sect from the Marvel Comics) is an underground fight club located in
Macau, China.[24] The club was founded by
Xialing when she was sixteen years old after running away from the
Ten Rings organization. The club makes its income from
livestreaming its fights onto the
dark web, with several of its participants having included Black Widows,
Extremis soldiers,
Emil Blonsky, and
Wong.
Shang-Chi is tricked into visiting the club by
Wenwu, who raids the club with his men to capture his children and
Katy.
Gulmira is a fictional city in
Afghanistan and the hometown of
Ho Yinsen. In 2008, following numerous terrorist attacks by the
Ten Rings,
Tony Stark dons his newly-built
Iron Man Mark III armor and flies to the town, where he kills several terrorists and destroys an arsenal of
Jericho Missiles nearby. Stark then leaves the town and begins flying back to the United States, but is intercepted by two
F-22 Raptors sent by the
U.S. Air Force. At the same time,
James Rhodes calls Stark and informs him of the incident in Gulmira. Stark initially denies his involvement, claiming that he was "driving with the top down", but later confesses that he was wearing the Iron Man armor before narrowly escaping, prompting Rhodes to
cover-up the incident by announcing to the public that it was a "training exercise".[citation needed]
The Joint Dark Energy Mission Facility is a top secret research facility used by S.H.I.E.L.D. and
NASA to study the
Tesseract as part of
Project Pegasus.[30] In 1995,
Carol Danvers and
Nick Fury infiltrate the base and discover Danvers' involvement testing an experimental light-speed engine powered by the Tesseract designed by Dr.
Wendy Lawson. It is eventually destroyed in 2012 by the energy emitted by the Tesseract after
Loki's arrival at the facility.
Madripoor (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a fictional island
city-state in the
Indonesian archipelago that is controlled by the
Power Broker, and inhabited by several criminals. Sharon Carter is revealed to have been living luxuriously there as a dealer in stolen art since the
Sokovia Accords, afraid to go back to the U.S. for fear of arrest. The island is divided into two parts, the wealthy Hightown and the deprived Lowtown.[citation needed]
The Midtown School of Science and Technology (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a
STEM-focused fictional high school in Queens, New York City.[36][37] Its students include
Peter Parker,
Ned Leeds,
Michelle Jones-Watson,
Flash Thompson,
Betty Brant, Jason Ionello,
Liz, Cindy Moon, Seymour O'Reilly, Tiny McKeever, Charles Murphy, Abe Brown, Sally Avril, Brad Davis, Zach Cooper, and Josh Scarino. Faculty includes Roger Harrington,[38] Coach Wilson, Mr. Cobbwell, Monica Warren, Barry Hapgood, and Julius Dell. The school's principal is Principal Morita, who is shown to be a descendant of Howling Commandos member
Jim Morita.[39]Henry W. Grady High School in
Atlanta,
Van Nuys High School and
Reseda High School in
Los Angeles, as well as
Franklin K. Lane High School in
Brooklyn doubled as the school in Spider-Man: Homecoming.[40][41][42] To change the setting from the Atlanta set to Queens, Trixter created a CGI model of the school and added 360-degree matte paintings.[7]
Mount Wundagore (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), is a mountain which holds the power of the Darkhold and features a shrine dedicated to the Scarlet Witch.[43] After the Darkhold is destroyed. Wanda Maximoff forces
Wong to lead her to Wundagore, allowing her to dream-walk into the body of her Earth-838 self and be with that universe's versions of
Billy and
Tommy Maximoff. After seeing Billy and Tommy recoiling in horror at her corruption, she uses her powers to bring down Wundagore, sacrificing and killing herself in the process.
New Asgard, formerly Tønsberg, is a village in
Norway which housed the Tesseract for centuries until
Johann Schmidt stole it during World War II.[45] The town is also where
Odin resides in his final days after being banished by Loki. Following the Blip, the town is renamed New Asgard and serves as a refuge for the surviving
Asgardians and other inhabitants of the
Nine Realms. It is recognized by the UN as a city-state, is led by
Valkyrie, and has tourist attractions memorializing Asgard's history such as an ice cream parlour named the "Infinity Conez."[44]
The New York Sanctum (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) in
Greenwich Village, New York City is one of the three Sanctum Sanctorums on Earth. Located on 177A
Bleecker Street,[46][47] it is used by the Masters of the Mystic Arts to store various relics and serves as one of their bases, formerly guarded by Daniel Drumm until he is replaced by Stephen Strange following his death. In 2017, Strange detains Loki and invites
Thor to the Sanctum, directing him to his father Odin. In 2018, following his escape from the Statesman,
Bruce Banner crash lands in the New York Sanctum and meets Strange and Wong. Strange and Wong then discuss the threat with Banner and
Tony Stark.[48] In 2024, the Sanctum becomes covered in snow temporarily. It is also visited by
Peter Parker who requests Strange's help, in which he performs a memory removing spell. After the spell goes wrong, Strange tasks Parker and his friends to retrieve
multiversal displaced people and bring them to the Sanctum.[49] Also, in 2024, Strange along with
América Chávez visit Earth-838 New York Sanctum which has a statue of a deceased Strange and is protected by the Sorcerer Supreme from that universe, Karl Modo.[50] A set for the building was constructed at Longcross Studios in Surrey, England for Doctor Strange, which was also used in Thor: Ragnarok before it was demolished.[35][51]
Puente Antiguo is a fictional town in
New Mexico where in 2010, astrophysicist Jane Foster, her intern Darcy Lewis, and her mentor Erik Selvig were studying atmospheric disturbances when they encounter Thor arriving via the
Bifröst. Upon learning of
Mjölnir's location nearby, Thor storms the S.H.I.E.L.D. facility surrounding the hammer before being arrested by
Phil Coulson. Later, following the arrival of
Sif and the
Warriors Three, the town becomes the battleground for a fight between Thor and the
Destroyer, who had been sent by his brother Loki. In 2013, Foster moves back to the town with Thor and they pursue their relationship. However, in 2015, they break up and Thor leaves the town. In 2023, after
the Blip, Foster learns she has stage 4 cancer and receives treatments at the hospital. In 2024, Foster continues the treatments but they prove to not be helping her.
Cerro Pelon Ranch in
Galisteo, New Mexico doubled as the city in Thor,[52] which was extensively modified for the film.[53][54]
The Raft (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a maximum security prison, with
Thaddeus Ross serving as warden. Sam Wilson, Wanda Maximoff, Clint Barton, and Scott Lang are remanded to the prison after helping Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes evade capture, thus violating the Sokovia Accords. However, they are later broken out by Steve Rogers and Natasha Romanoff, though Barton and Lang wished to return to their families under house arrest. In 2018,
Trish Walker and
Willis Stryker are imprisoned in the Raft after going on respective killing sprees. In 2024, days following his escape from a prison in Berlin, the
Dora Milaje of
Wakanda detain Helmut Zemo to the Raft via the
Royal Talon Fighter.[57] Designed to hold super-powered individuals, the prison is located deep in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.[58][59]
The Red Room is a large aerial facility which acted as the primary base of the program of the same name, led by General
Dreykov. It is also the site where Black Widows are brainwashed and trained to become elite assassins.[61] It is destroyed in 2016 after
Melina Vostokoff took down one of its engines. Visual effects for the facility in Black Widow were provided by
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and
Digital Domain, who also worked on the final battle and skydiving sequences.[62][63] Digital Domain referenced
Stalinist architecture, such as the
Ostankino Tower in
Moscow, when designing the Red Room,[60] while the filmmakers hired military consultants to ensure the practicality of the facility.[64]
Rose Hill is a fictional town in
Tennessee where Tony Stark is forced to stay in after
his armor ran out of power. It is also the hometown of
Harley Keener, a child who aided Stark in repairing his suit and later attended his funeral. The fictional town is named after the city
of the same name in
North Carolina where portions of Iron Man 3 were filmed.[65]
Sokovia (Соковиja, Sokovija) is a fictional
landlocked country in Eastern Europe, using not Latin but
Cyrillic script, strangely located (thus must be not larger than
Duchy of Luxembourg), between
Central Europe countries:
Slovakia and the
Czech Republic, that both use Latin alphabet for around a millennium. Fictional Sokovia is the home of
Wanda and Pietro Maximoff, as well as Helmut Zemo. The United States initiated a bombing campaign against the country to stabilize and secure peace with Stark Industries-manufactured bombs, killing Wanda and Pietro Maximoff's parents. Additionally,
Mary Walker and her
U.S. Army squad were ambushed by the Sokovian Armed Forces, with almost all of them murdered. During the Hydra uprising, Hydra sets up
a research facility in Sokovia, where they conduct experiments on the Maximoff twins using
Loki's scepter. The country later serves as the battleground for
a conflict between the Avengers and Ultron, which results in the destruction of the country's capital city, Novi Grad, as well as the ratification of the Sokovia Accords. The country is
annexed by the surrounding countries soon after.[66] Scenes set in the city were filmed in the
Aosta Valley region in Italy in Avengers: Age of Ultron,[67] in which local storefronts were replaced with
Cyrillic script.[68]Hendon Police College, a training facility for London's
Metropolitan Police Service was also used to portray a city in Sokovia.[69]
The Stark Eco-Compound[70] is the residence of Tony Stark,
Pepper Potts, and their daughter,
Morgan Stark. Located in the countryside of Upstate New York,[1] it is built by Tony Stark shortly after his marriage with Potts, and he lived there until his death in 2023. His funeral is also held in front of his residence.
The Stark Expo, also known as the World Exposition of Tomorrow, is an exposition located at the
Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City. Started by Tony Stark's father, Howard, it brings together great minds and showcases new technology.[71][72][73] Past attendees include Phineas Horton (showcasing his Synthetic Man) and Peter Parker.[74]
The Stark Mansion is the private residence of Tony Stark, located at 10880 Malibu Point,
Malibu, California. It is destroyed by
Aldrich Killian (posing as the Mandarin) in a missile attack. The mansion's exterior shots in Iron Man were digitally added to footage of
Point Dume in Malibu,[75] while its interior shots were filmed at soundstages in
Playa Vista, Los Angeles.[76]
The Ten Rings Headquarters is the main base of operations of the Ten Rings criminal organization, located on an unknown mountaintop in China. The compound was founded a thousand years ago by Wenwu during his early years as a
warlord, and also served as his personal retreat for him and his family, with Shang-Chi and Xialing having spent their childhoods there. The compound includes a
throne room, training grounds for its warriors, a library housed with relics of
Ta Lo, a
dungeon, and an underground parking lot. After Xialing assumes leadership of the Ten Rings, she redecorates the compound with
graffiti reminiscent of her
Golden Dagger Club.[citation needed]
Wakanda (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), officially the Kingdom of Wakanda, is a highly advanced fictional African nation that formerly posed as a struggling
third world country before it is opened up to the world by
T'Challa. Its capital city is Birnin Zana, also known as the Golden City. The main language is
Xhosa, though its civilians also speak English.[79] It consists of lush river valleys, mountain ranges rich in natural resources, and a capital city that integrates space-age technology with traditional designs. Wakanda consists of six tribes: the Golden Tribe, the River Tribe, the Mining Tribe, the Merchant Tribe, the Border Tribe, and the Jabari Tribe. The country has been noted for its
Afrofuturism,[80][81][82] with the country cited as a possible example of how African nations might have developed in the absence of
European colonialism.[83][84][85]
Westview is a fictional town in New Jersey. Prior to the Blip, a plot of land in the town is purchased by the
Vision and Wanda Maximoff, but the Vision is killed soon after by Thanos. When Maximoff arrives at the plot of land, she inadvertently creates an anomaly around the town, placing almost all of its inhabitants under
mind control, transforming objects on a molecular level, and broadcasting a sitcom titled WandaVision. Dubbed "the Hex" by
Darcy Lewis,
Monica Rambeau gains superhuman abilities after passing through the barrier three times, while simulacrums of
Billy Maximoff,
Tommy Maximoff, and the Vision are created. When
Agatha Harkness attacks Maximoff, she destroys the boundary, the residents escape, and Wanda's children and Vision disintegrate. The town was named as a reference to Feige's hometown of
Westfield, New Jersey, but with the initials "W" and "V".[86]
Space
Contraxia is an
ice planet which is commonly visited by the
Ravagers as a place to relax, especially at the Iron Lotus
brothel. Sometime in 2014,
Stakar Ogord comes across Yondu on Contraxia, while
Howard the Duck also appears in the bar. A set for the Iron Lotus was built at
Pinewood Atlanta Studios in
Atlanta, Georgia, which Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 production designer Scott Chambliss sought to make it appear to have been put together from "repurposed junk", creating a "neon jungle" covered in ice and snow.[87]
Counter-Earth (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) also known as Halfworld, was an artificial planet located in the Keystone Quadrant. It was designed by the
High Evolutionary as a replication of Earth and was inhabited by the Humanimals.
Ego's planet (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a living mass of matter that the Celestial Ego formed around himself thousands of years ago, causing him to resemble a large red planet with a face. The planet is destroyed by a bomb planted by the Guardians of the Galaxy in Ego's brain, and is also destroyed by
Ultron in an alternate reality.[14] Visual effects of the planet in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 were provided by
Animal Logic, Method Studios, and
Weta Digital. Weta and Animal Logic's work were heavily based on
fractal art, including
Apollonian gaskets and
Mandelbulbs,[88][89] and was described by director
James Gunn as "the biggest visual effect of all time".[90]
The Garden,[91] also known as Planet 0259-S[92] and Titan II,[93] is a greenfield planet where
Thanos resides following his "retirement". After fulfilling his lifelong goal of wiping out half of the Universe, he teleports to the planet and smiles at the sunrise as he reflects on his success. Three weeks later, the Avengers travel there and Thor decapitates him upon learning that he had destroyed the
Infinity Stones.
Knowhere (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is the severed head of an ancient deceased Celestial which acts as the homeworld of the Exitar mining colony, founded by
Taneleer Tivan, the Collector. In 2014, Knowhere is visited by the Guardians of the Galaxy arrive who try to sell the
Power Stone to the Collector, but after an explosion caused by the Stone, the Collector's museum is destroyed. Shortly after,
Ronan the Accuser and his enforcers arrive and the Guardians leave. In 2018, Knowhere is attacked by Thanos who acquires the Reality Stone. In 2025, Knowhere is purchased by the Guardians from Tivan, who begin to renovate it into their new headquarters. They host a Christmas celebration for their leader,
Peter Quill by bringing
Kevin Bacon there. In 2026, Knowhere has become a mobile city. It comes under attack from the
High Evolutionary's Hellspawn and becomes the safe haven for the captured animals and engineered children.
Nebula decides to take leadership over Knowhere.[94] In an alternate reality,
Star-Lord T'Challa leads the Ravagers on a mission against the Collector on Knowhere.[95] Visual effects of the planet were created by
Framestore.[96]
The Kyln (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a high-security prison run by the
Nova Corps. The Guardians of the Galaxy are brought together in the prison and execute an escape plan, with
Ronan ordering
Nebula to massacre all of its inhabitants upon learning of Gamora's escape. Visual effects of the prison were created by Framestore.[96]
Lamentis-1 is a purple-hued moon that is destroyed by a nearby planet in the year 2077.
Loki and
Sylvie arrive on the moon through a Time Door, but are unable to escape due to their
TemPad having run out of power. After failing to board an Ark to escape, they are rescued and recaptured by the
TVA. Loki production designer Kasra Farahani opted to build an enormous practical set piece of the town Sharoo instead of using
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM)'s
StageCraft technology,[97] implementing a "blocky
ziggurat language" and using black-light paint to distinguish it from other alien worlds in the MCU.[98] Visual effects for the moon were provided by
Digital Domain, who also considered making the planet "a lush world covered in greenery", one "dominated by massive oceans", and one containing a
molten core which later
implodes.[99]
Morag is an abandoned
ocean planet located in the
Andromeda Galaxy, with its oceans only receding to expose its landmasses every 300 years. In 2014, Peter Quill arrives on the planet to obtain the
Orb, a mission that is replicated by
Star-Lord T'Challa in an alternate reality.[95] In 2023,
James Rhodes and Nebula time-travel to 2014 Morag and knock Peter Quill out before acquiring the Orb. Visual effects of the planet in Guardians of the Galaxy were created by
Moving Picture Company (MPC).[96]
Sakaar (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a planet ruled by the
Grandmaster, who holds his
Contest of Champions on the planet. In 2015, it was visited by
Bruce Banner and in 2017, by
Thor and Loki. In 2025, it is visited again by Banner, who retrieves his son, Skaar. In an alternate universe, the planet is destroyed by Ultron.[14] The art of Thor co-creator
Jack Kirby served as one of the primary inspirations for Sakaar's depiction in Thor: Ragnarok,[100] and was described by executive producer Brad Winderbaum as "the toilet of the Universe" surrounded by an endless number of wormholes.[101] A set for the planet was constructed at the
Village Roadshow Studios in
Oxenford, Queensland, including the Grandmaster's palace and the surrounding junkyard.[102] Visual effects for the planet's junkyard landscape and wormholes were created by
Double Negative and Digital Domain.[103] A Sakaarian
national anthem is featured in an unused version of the second
post-credits scene of Ragnarok, which was improvised by
Jeff Goldblum and Waititi.[104]
The Sovereign is an amalgamation of planets artificially fused together which serves as the homeworld to the
genetically-engineeredspecies of the same name. Powered by
Anulax Batteries, it is ruled by
Ayesha. The amalgamation is destroyed by Ultron in an alternate reality.[14] Visual effects for Ayesha's lair in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 were provided by Framestore,[106] while
Luma Pictures worked on the Sovereign world and its people.[88] A set for the planet was also built at Pinewood Atlanta Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, which employed a "1950s pulp fiction variation on 1930s art deco design aesthetic".[87]
Titan (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is an
exoplanet and the homeworld of Thanos before its inhabitants were wiped out from
overpopulation.[107] In 2018,
Tony Stark,
Peter Parker, and
Stephen Strange ally with the Guardians of the Galaxy to confront Thanos, who acquires the Time Stone following a battle and teleports to
Wakanda. In 2023, Parker, Strange, and the Guardians depart Titan through a portal. In an alternate 2018, in the 838 universe, the Illuminati kill Thanos on Titan, and then kill that universe's version of Stephen Strange after he is corrupted by the Darkhold.[108]
Vormir (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a barren planet and the location of the
Soul Stone, which is guarded by the
Red Skull. In 2018, Thanos coerces Gamora into revealing the Stone's location before teleporting there, where she is sacrificed for Thanos to obtain the Stone. Similarly,
Natasha Romanoff sacrifices herself in 2023 for
Clint Barton to acquire the Stone.
Xandar (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is the capital of the Nova Empire and home of the
Nova Corps. In 2014,
Ronan attacks Xandar in retaliation for the
Kree–Nova War, killing most of the Nova Corps before being defeated by the Guardians of the Galaxy and the
Ravagers. It is later decimated by Thanos in 2018, an event replicated by Ultron in an alternate reality.[14] Scenes set on the planet in Guardians of the Galaxy were filmed at
Millennium Bridge, London,[109][110] while visual effects were done by
Moving Picture Company (MPC).[96]
Asgard (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a small, flat planetary body and the home of the
Asgardians. It is destroyed by
Surtur.
Double Negative embedded a
computer-generated rendering of Asgard onto footage of the coast of Norway filmed with an Arri Alexa camera in a helicopter in Thor: The Dark World.[111] For its appearance in Thor: Ragnarok, production designer
Dan Hennah sought to give the realm "more of a humanity" than in previous films by adding smaller building perspectives, making it appear more practical and utilitarian.[112] A set for the realm was constructed at the
Village Roadshow Studios in
Oxenford,
Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, based on the aesthetics of previous Thor films,[102] while visual effects were provided by
Framestore based on assets
Double Negative had from The Dark World.[103]
The Rainbow Bridge is a long magical bridge that runs from the center of
Asgard to the edge, connecting the Royal Palace of Valaskjalf to Himinbjörg, the generator of the
Bifröst Bridge. In 2011, the Rainbow Bridge is destroyed by
Thor, but is later repaired by
Heimdall using the power of the
Tesseract.
Odin's vault, also known as Odin's treasure room, is a room in the Royal Palace of Valaskjalf that contained many powerful and magical artifacts, including a replica of the
Infinity Gauntlet, the Eternal Flame, the
Casket of Ancient Winters, and the
Tesseract.
Hel (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a region in
Niflheim that serves as the home of the dead. After
Hela is banished there by her father,
Odin, she attempts to escape and slaughters almost all of the Valkyrie, only to be defeated by Odin once again. The flashback sequence in Thor: Ragnarok featuring the Valkyrie was produced by
Rising Sun Pictures, who achieved its surreal ethereal appearance through a combination of
motion capture,
computer graphics, a 900 fps
frame rate, and a special 360-degree lighting rig containing 200 strobe lights.[113]
Muspelheim (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name) is a fiery realm that is home to the Fire Demons, most notably
Surtur. Two years following the
Battle of Sokovia,
Thor journeys there to confront Surtur on
Ragnarök before killing him. Thor: Ragnarok production designer Dan Hennah described the realm as a
Dyson sphere which draws power out of a dying star to energize its inhabitants.[115]
Nidavellir (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name) is an
Alderson disk surrounding a dying star, inhabited by gigantic
Dwarves who served as blacksmiths for the
Asgardians, forging weapons such as
Mjölnir,
Stormbreaker, and the
Infinity Gauntlet out of
uru. Sometime between 2014 and 2015, Thanos visits the forge, forcing the Dwarves to make the Infinity Gauntlet before slaughtering them and smelting
Eitri's hands.
Thor,
Groot, and
Rocket visit the forge several years later, aiding Eitri in creating Stormbreaker.
Svartalfheim (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name), also known as the Dark World, is a planet that is wreathed in perpetual darkness and ruled by the
Dark Elves, led by
Malekith the Accursed. Visual effects of Thor: The Dark World's prologue scene were done by Blur Studio, and mainly consisted of CGI with live-action shots interwoven throughout.[111] Subsequent scenes in the film were shot in
Iceland, with Double Negative adding ruins, mountains, Dark Elf ships, and skies.[111]
Midgard (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name), is another name for Earth.
The Astral Dimension (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), also known as the Astral plane, is a dimension in which the soul resides outside the body. It is mainly featured in the form of
astral projection in Doctor Strange when the
Ancient One pushes
Stephen Strange's astral form out of his body. The fight sequence in Doctor Strange between
Stephen Strange and a Zealot's astral forms was the first scene in the film written by director
Scott Derrickson, who was inspired by the comic Doctor Strange: The Oath.[116] Visual effects for scenes set in the dimension were provided by
Framestore, who described the process as "one of the hardest effects [they've] had to deal with".[117] This imagery is reused in Avengers: Endgame, WandaVision, Spider-Man: No Way Home, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. The Astral Dimension is also connected to the MCU's afterlife, which is interpreted as being a subjective reality depending on the belief system of the individual. In Black Panther and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, the Ancestral Plane is a location where deceased Wakandans reside, specifically those who have worn the mantle of Black Panther. The living are able to communicate with these past rulers upon ingestion of the
heart-shaped herb. In Moon Knight, the Duat is the name for the Egyptian perspective of the afterlife, where the goddess
Taweret ferries
Marc Spector and Steven Grant across an ocean of sand to reach the Field of Reeds. If a person's heart does not balance against the Feather of Truth, they are consumed by other lost souls in the sands. Spector and Grant make it back to the real world through the Gates of Osiris. In Thor: Love and Thunder, Valhalla is revealed to be the
Asgardian afterlife.
The Citadel at the End of Time is a castle atop an
asteroid at the
end of time where
He Who Remains resides and watches over the Sacred Timeline, which orbits the place. Carved in situ from the asteroid and made a "black stone with gold vein embellishments", the Citadel is mostly abandoned except for He Who Remains' office, with Loki production designer Kasra Farahani intending to reflect the loneliness of He Who Remains. Outside his office, there are also numerous 13-foot-tall statues of "sentinels of time" in the "Hall of Heroes", each holding half of an hourglass. A
nebula outside the window and a fireplace were used as light sources in He's office.[119] The design and architecture of the Citadel was inspired by
Hearst Castle and compared to
Sunset Boulevard.[118][120] The Production Designer for Loki was inspired by the Japanese repair technique
Kintsugi as it uses gold to repair cracks in broken pottery.[121]
The Dark Dimension (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name) is a timeless dimension inhabited by
Dormammu. It is an amalgamation of itself and all other dimensions Dormammu had conquered and absorbed into it.
Stephen Strange visits it to bargain with Dormammu after
Kaecilius contacts it to absorb the Earth. Years later,
Clea, who reigns from the dimension, recruits Strange to help save it from an incursion. Visual effects of the dimension in Doctor Strange were provided by
Method Studios and
Luma Pictures.[117]Doctor Strange visual effects supervisor
Stephane Ceretti described the Dark Dimension as a "dynamic environment", with the Luma team using art by
Steve Ditko as a reference.[122]
The Mirror Dimension is a dimension which causes the surroundings to be reflected in different directions, similar to the function of a
mirror, without affecting the real world. Due to its nature, it is used by the sorcerers for training and controlling threats. The
Ancient One uses it during the
Battle of New York, while
Stephen Strange uses it against
Kaecilius,
Thanos,
Peter Parker, and
Wanda Maximoff. According to Doctor Strange director Scott Derrickson, the action sequences set in the dimension is an attempt to take Inception "to the Nth degree and take it way more surreal and way farther".[123]Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) was primarily responsible for visual effects of the Manhattan folding sequence, which consisted of 200 shots and was mainly CGI, although some real-life shots of New York were used.[117] Meanwhile, Luma Pictures worked on the first mirror sequence at the beginning of the film.[117]
The Quantum Realm (based on the
Microverse from the Marvel Comics) (for the theory in physics, see
quantum mechanics) with is a subatomic universe that exists outside of space and time. It can only be entered through
subatomic particles or forms of mystical magic.[124][125] In 1987,
Janet van Dyne went subatomic and was stranded in the realm for thirty years. Additionally, the Council of Kangs exiled
Kang the Conqueror to the realm. He befriended van Dyne, who helped him fix his time chair, only to learn from a neurolink who he really was. She then betrayed him, causing him to remain trapped. During this time, Kang conquered the realm and took control over it, building an empire, and displacing its residents.[126][127] In 2015,
Scott Lang goes subatomic to defeat
Darren Cross and enters the realm, but manages to escape, while Cross remains stuck in the realm. In 2018, van Dyne is rescued by
Hank Pym and they leave the realm. That same year, Lang becomes stuck in the realm's time vortex for five years, although he only experienced five hours in the realm. In 2019, agents of
S.H.I.E.L.D. return to the main timeline through the realm from an alternate 1983 to defeat the
Chronicoms. In 2023, Lang and the
Avengers use the realm to travel to alternate timelines to reverse
the Blip. An
alternate Thanos gets ahold of their technology and uses the realm to travel himself, his ship, and his army to their universe. In 2026, van Dyne, Pym, Lang,
Hope van Dyne, and
Cassie Lang are transported into the realm after Cassie's quantum satellite gets heard by Cross. They find themselves hunted by Kang, who wants revenge on van Dyne. After they find a portal to leave the realm, Kang tries to follow, but ultimately gets defeated and pulled into his multiversal power core. The Quantum Realm is so named because the name "Microverse" is associated with the
Micronauts, whose rights are held by
Hasbro Studios.[128]Quantum physicist and
California Institute of Technology staff researcher Spiros Michalakis suggested the new name.[129] Visual effects for the dimension in Ant-Man, Doctor Strange, and Ant-Man and the Wasp were provided by Method Studios.[117]
The Soul World (based on the Marvel Comics location
of the same name), also known as the Way Station,[130] is a
pocket dimension inside the
Soul Stone[131] which Thanos finds himself in for a brief moment after he snapped his fingers and wiped out half of the Universe's population, where he encountered a young
Gamora. Christopher Markus, co-writer of Avengers: Endgame, also stated that Banner met the Hulk in the Soul World. The Soul World was originally also going to be visited by
Tony Stark in a deleted scene of Avengers: Endgame, where he would have met an older version of his daughter
Morgan;[132] however, in the final cut of the movie, it is where
Clint Barton briefly ends up after
Natasha Romanoff sacrifices herself for him to obtain the Soul Stone.
The Veil of Noor separates Earth from a dimension inhabited by supernatural cosmic beings known as the Clandestines, or the djinn in Pakistani culture. Several individuals were exiled from the Noor dimension to Earth in the 1940s, shortly before the
Partition of India. Most seek mystical bangles imbued with Noor power to tear down the Veil and return home. One, named Aisha, fled with one of the bangles, which was passed down through the generations to Kamala Khan.
The Chitauri mother ship was a large spaceship which served as the
mother ship of the
Chitauri army during the
Battle of New York. It was destroyed by
Tony Stark when he carried a
nuclear missile through a wormhole into space, severing the connection between the mothership and the Chitauri as well as the
Leviathans and ending the battle. In a
deleted scene of Avengers: Endgame,
Rocket teases the Avengers about not destroying it earlier.[148]
The Dark Aster is the flagship spaceship of
Ronan the Accuser, a three-mile wide ship in the
Kree Accusers fleet. Angered by the signing of a peace treaty with the Nova Empire, he used it to attack
Xandar, but is destroyed by the Milano. A similar spacecraft known as the Silver Aster is used by him during the
Kree–Skrull War.[151] Visual effects of the spaceship were created by
Moving Picture Company (MPC) and
Sony Pictures Imageworks.[96]
The Domo[152] is the
Eternals' starship which serves as their primary base of operations. Composed of three large, circular rooms,[153] it is completely silent, controlled by the Eternals' golden cosmic energy, and is used by them to arrive on Earth 7,000 years ago.[154] The most important room is known as the "bridge", which contains a large statue of the
CelestialArishem and pattern-covered walls which generate the Eternals' suits; Eternals production designer
Eve Stewart explained that the room was designed to look like mosques, synagogues, churches, and temples, and the set was constructed in eight weeks, illuminated by lights through a
fiberglass below.[153] Another room contains numerous ancient artifacts and
mythological objects, including the Emerald Tablet,
King Arthur's
Excalibur, and the
Holy Grail.[155][156] The unique design of the ship was inspired by the art of
Jack Kirby,
meteor dust, as well as
sacred geometry,[157][153] and it is named after the Marvel Comics character
of the same name.[158]
The Eclector is a large spaceship used by
Yondu's
Ravager clan until its destruction in 2014. However, Yondu managed to escape along with
Rocket and
Groot on the ship's third quadrant prior to its destruction. Visual effects for scenes set in the spaceship in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 were provided by
Framestore;[106] the destruction of the ship was handled by
Weta Digital.[159] A set of the ship was constructed at
Pinewood Atlanta Studios in
Atlanta, Georgia in sections to provide a 360-degree view of the ship as well as to move sections around and portray different areas of the ship.[87]
The Milano is an M-type spaceship flown by
Peter Quill since he was ten, named after his childhood crush,
Alyssa Milano. It later becomes the main ship for the
Guardians of the Galaxy, but is destroyed during the
Battle of Xandar. After being rebuilt by the
Nova Corps, it is severely damaged by an asteroid field and abandoned on Berhert, with the Benatar becoming the Guardians' new ship. To limit the amount of
blue screen the actors had to interact with, interiors for the ship were constructed at
Pinewood Atlanta Studios in
Atlanta, Georgia for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,[87] including the cockpit that had been built for the first film and originally stored in London.[160] The real-life Alyssa Milano called the homage "pretty cool" upon learning of the reference.[161] In an alternate reality where
T'Challa became Star-Lord, the spaceship is named the Mandela instead, a reference to
Nelson Mandela.[95]
Q-Ships are ring-shaped spaceships used by Thanos and
his children. They are stored in the Sanctuary II, and deployed from the ship when invading other planets. The Q-Ships also contain Outrider dropships, allowing them to unleash Outriders onto a battlefield. When
Ebony Maw and
Cull Obsidian attack New York City in 2018,
Doctor Strange is taken prisoner on a Q-Ship until his rescue by Tony Stark and
Peter Parker. One is also used by Proxima Midnight and Corvus Glaive to leave
Scotland, while another deploys Outrider dropships into the atmosphere during the
Battle of Wakanda.
The Sanctuary II is a 12-mile-long (19 km) long spaceship owned by Thanos, which serves as an orbital base while an invasion is in progress as well as a heavily armed warcraft.[162] It can also carry four
Q-Ships under its wings. Following the
Time Heist, an alternate version of Thanos and his army from 2014 is transported to 2023 on the Sanctuary II, and the
Avengers Compound is destroyed by its missiles. During the subsequent
Battle of Earth, Thanos orders his troops to "rain fire" on the battlefield, but the ship is destroyed by
Carol Danvers.
The Statesman is a large spaceship owned by the
Grandmaster stolen by
Loki and used to transport the
Asgardians away from
Asgard before it is destroyed during
Ragnarök. However, on its way to Earth, it is attacked by the Sanctuary II and destroyed by Thanos using the
Power Stone.
Helicarriers (based on the Marvel Comics vehicle
of the same name) are flying
aircraft carriers used by
S.H.I.E.L.D. as mobile command centers. They are equipped with
optical camouflage and, later, large-sized cannons and repulsor engines courtesy of Tony Stark, as well as two stacked carrier decks and a hull number of 64.[105] During the
Hydra uprising,
Hydra attempts to use three Helicarriers linked to S.H.I.E.L.D. satellites to assassinate potential threats, but they are destroyed by
Steve Rogers and his allies. Following the dissolution of S.H.I.E.L.D., the original Helicarrier is recommissioned and used to assist the
Avengers during the
Battle of Sokovia. Visual effects for the Helicarrier in The Avengers were provided by
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), Scanline VFX, Evil Eye Pictures, and Luma Pictures,[105] while visual effects in Captain America: The Winter Soldier were also provided by ILM.[163]
Leviathans are large cybernetically-enhanced serpentine creatures used by the
Chitauri under the command of Thanos to transport troops and warships, weighing approximately three million tonnes each. Following the
Battle of New York, the Leviathans are salvaged by
Hydra, with one of them stored in the
Hydra Research Base in
Sokovia. Another group of Leviathans are later used by an alternate version of Thanos from 2014 during the
Battle of Earth, and are destroyed by Tony Stark using the
Nano Gauntlet.
Quinjets (based on the Marvel Comics vehicle
of the same name) are technologically advanced jets used by
S.H.I.E.L.D., the
Avengers, and
S.T.R.I.K.E. teams. After the
Battle of Sokovia, the
Hulk leaves on a Quinjet, escaping Earth's atmosphere before crash-landing on
Sakaar via a wormhole. The interior of the jet was built for The Avengers and later shipped to Australia for Thor: Ragnarok.[164]
Land vehicles
Luis' van is a brown 1972
Ford Econoline owned by
Luis and used by him,
Scott Lang,
Dave, and
Kurt. It is later used by them for their company,
X-Con Security Consultants, and is outfitted with a miniaturized
Quantum Tunnel. Lang is later trapped in the Quantum Realm for five years until a rat ran over the control panel of the Quantum Tunnel, allowing him to escape. It is destroyed by Thanos during the
Battle of Earth.
Steve Rogers' motorcycle is a
Harley-Davidson motorcycle used by Steve Rogers. In Captain America: The First Avenger, Rogers uses a weaponized 1942
WLA motorcycle in
World War II in his fights against
Hydra.[165] In Captain America: The Winter Soldier and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, this model is shown to be displayed in the Captain America exhibit in the
Smithsonian Air and Space Museum.[166] In The Avengers, Rogers is shown to have switched to a
Softail Slim model for commuting around New York City, before using the
Street 750 model when fleeing from pursuing Hydra agents in The Winter Soldier.[167] Rogers later uses other models such as the Breakout,[168]V-Rod and the Softail Slim S.[169]
The Ant-Man suit (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) enables the wearer to change size while retaining strength, as well as communicate with and control ants. It was designed by
Hank Pym and used during
S.H.I.E.L.D. missions until the
Pym Particles began to have an effect on him, and is later stolen by
Scott Lang, who becomes the next Ant-Man.
Double Negative and
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) worked on Ant-Man's shrinking effect in
the first film, which shows the outline of his body as in the comics.[173]
The Black Panther suit (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a protective
nanotech suit woven from
vibranium that is worn by the King of Wakanda in his duties as the Black Panther. The suit features retractable claws made of vibranium and is nearly impenetrable. Versions of the suit have been worn by
T'Chaka,
T'Challa,
N'Jadaka, and
Shuri. T'Challa's second suit is also able to be shrunk down into a necklace as well as absorb energy for future redistribution. The suit is a combination of a practical costume and visual effects, featuring a vibranium mesh weave similar to
chainmail.[174]Captain America: Civil War costume designer
Judianna Makovsky called the Black Panther costume "difficult" since "you needed sort of a feline body, but it's hard and practical at the same time. You needed a feeling of some sort of ethnicity in there, but of a world [Wakanda] we weren't really creating yet, so you didn't want to go too far and say too much about that world."[175]
Captain America's uniform (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is the costume worn by the bearers of the Captain America mantle whilst on missions.
The first uniform, worn by
Steve Rogers, is a cloth
USO costume based on his original costume from the comics, along with a
heater shield. Upon hearing that
Bucky Barnes' unit was
MIA, he alters his USO uniform for the rescue mission, wearing a combat jacket and pants over the costume and donning a blue helmet from a USO
chorus girl.
Howard Stark later designs a combat uniform made of carbon polymer, with leather pouches and a holster, a wingless mask, and a
round vibranium shield. After being unfrozen, he uses a costume designed by
S.H.I.E.L.D. which resembles his USO uniform. During his time with
S.T.R.I.K.E., he uses a new uniform designed for stealth missions which has a darker shade of blue. He later returns to a variant of his
World War II costume, taken from a display at the Captain America exhibit at the Smithsonian.
Tony Stark later creates a new uniform for Rogers, which incorporates magnetic gauntlets, allowing him to recall his shield. A slightly different version of this suit is used during the
Avengers Civil War. During his exile, the suit is altered to remove the star and the Avengers logo. He is equipped with Wakandan shields on his arms before the
Battle of Wakanda. After the Avengers reunite, he uses another new uniform.
When
John Walker is handed the Captain America mantle, he uses an entirely new design, based on
that from the comics: the uniform is blue, with red highlights and chest stripes, and includes red fingerless gloves. In place of the Avengers logo, it has the
flag of the United States on the arms, and a stylized star on the mask and chest. He also carries a handgun and a version of Captain America's shield given by Steve Rogers to Sam Wilson. After he is stripped of the title, he builds a new shield, and dyes his uniform black, becoming the "
U.S. Agent".
Sam Wilson dons a new version of the uniform as the new Captain America, incorporating his new
vibranium wings.[176] This version, a gift from Wakanda, sticks closely to the version that he wears in the comics, with the main color being white. The star design spreads across the whole chest, and resembles the logo of the
U.S. Air Force. The white mask incorporates Wilson's red goggles and stretches from the shoulders to just above his ears.
The
Maasai people of
Kenya (top) inspired about 80% of the design of the
Dora Milaje, Wakanda's all-female special forces (bottom).[177]
The Dora Milaje uniform is the uniform worn by the
Dora Milaje of
Wakanda. It is made up of a body suit, harness, vibranium shoulder armor, neck rings, knee-high boots, and a waist cape. Silver rings are worn on the neck and arms (with the exception of
Okoye, whose rings are gold to denote her status as general). The design of the uniform was partially inspired by tribal
Filipino costume, as well as African influences.[178]Black Panther costume designer
Ruth E. Carter wanted to avoid the "girls in the bathing suits" look, and instead had the Dora Milaje wear full armor that they would practically need for battle.[179] Anthony Francisco, the Senior Visual Development Illustrator, noted the Dora Milaje costumes were based 80 percent on the
Maasai people, five percent on
samurai, five percent on
ninjas, and five percent on the
Ifugao people from the
Philippines.[177]
The EXO-7 Falcon is a winged harness created by the
U.S. military for the
Air National Guard. It is used by former
PararescuemenSam Wilson and Riley, the latter of whom was killed during a mission. Sam then left active duty and joined the
Avengers after assisting Steve Rogers and
Natasha Romanoff during the
Hydra uprising. The suit features retractable wings and a pair of collapsible
Steyr SPP submachine guns. Tony Stark later creates a new set of bulletproof retractable wings, featuring
a drone as well as missiles and a wrist-mounted submachine gun. During a battle with
John Walker, the suit is severely damaged beyond repair, and Sam leaves it with
Joaquin Torres.
Iron Man's armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a set of
armored suits created by Tony Stark to combat threats. Most follow the same red and gold color scheme and contain similar functions. Stark would eventually create up to 85 armors, 34 of which are part of the original "
Iron Legion". Many of his early suits were highly mobile and versatile, with the ability to be transformed or stored in various objects including a suitcase (Mark V), a cylindrical pod (Mark VII), and detachable parts (Mark XLII). Eventually, beginning with the Mark L armor, Stark is able to store his armor in the form of nanobots in his
arc reactor which could flow over his body, assembling based on cybernetic commands, allowing Stark to create endless combinations and new weapons to manifest out of the armor.
The Hulkbuster armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a modular add-on to Tony Stark's regular armor. Developed by Stark and
Bruce Banner, its purpose is to restrain the Hulk and minimize the damage caused by him. The first-generation armor (the Iron Man Mark XLIV armor) is remotely controlled by a mobile service module named Veronica (named after the
Archie Comics character
Veronica Lodge)[180] and is used to restrain the Hulk following a rampage by him in
Johannesburg, South Africa. In 2018, Banner is seen wearing an upgraded version of the armor (the Iron Man Mark XLVIII armor), which he uses during the
Battle of Wakanda and the killing of
Thanos.
The Hydra Stomper armor is a suit of armor built by Howard Stark for Steve Rogers during World War II as the
Hydra Stomper in an alternate reality in which
Peggy Carter becomes
Captain Carter.[181] Powered by the
Tesseract, the writers of What If...? originally named the armor the "Hydra Smasher" before
Kevin Feige suggested the name change.[182]
The Iron Legion (based on the Marvel Comics element
of the same name) is two separate sets of armor built by Tony Stark. The first is a set of specialized armors (the Mark VIII–XLI armors) built due to his insomnia for various situations that he might encounter, which he uses against
A.I.M. He eventually destroys them due to the friction they cause between him and Pepper. The second set is a series of drones built by Stark to aid the Avengers, which are later taken control by
Ultron and destroyed in battle with the Avengers.
The Iron Monger armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is an armored suit similar to the
Iron Man armor. After
Obadiah Stane gains Stark's salvaged Mark I armor from the
Ten Rings, he reverse engineers it to create an even more powerful suit with added weapons, such as a minigun on the right arm. The suit is powered by Stark's personal
arc reactor, forcing Stark to use a replacement to power his own suit, although he manages to defeat Stane.
The Iron Spider armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name), also known as Item 17A, is an armored nanotech suit created by Tony Stark for
Peter Parker's use as an Avenger. The suit features four mechanical legs that can be unfolded from the back of the suit, allowing enhanced mobility and climbing skills, as well as
web-shooters. Following his fight with the
Vulture, Stark offers Parker the suit and membership to the Avengers, but Parker declines both. Two years later, Stark uses it to rescue Parker after he falls from
Ebony Maw's
Q-Ship, and Parker uses it during the
Battle of Titan, the
Battle of Earth, and a local charity event. The suit was then confiscated by the Department of Damage Control, but Parker eventually got it back and used it to find an MIT administrator, and later to battle
Otto Octavius. For the suit's first appearance at the end of Spider-Man: Homecoming,
Framestore created models and textures in anticipation for future MCU projects, while Trixter created the "clean, high tech" vault that the suit appears in.[7]
The Rescue armor[1] (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name), also known as the Iron Man Mark XLIX armor,[183] is an armored nanotech suit created by Tony Stark for his wife,
Pepper Potts. It features a blue and silver color scheme, and many of the same abilities as
Iron Man's armor. Potts uses it in the
Battle of Earth against
Thanos and his forces.[184]
The War Machine armor (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a powered suit of armor originally developed by Tony Stark as the Iron Man Mark II armor before it is confiscated by
James Rhodes and enhanced by
Justin Hammer with machine guns in the wrists, a minigun on the right shoulder and a grenade launcher on the left, weapons which later proved to be ineffective. Stark later removes the modifications and rebuilds the suit himself using his own superior technology. This upgraded suit is briefly given a red, white, and blue color scheme and renamed the Iron Patriot by the U.S. government. It is later changed back to the gray color scheme and upgraded again, but accidentally disabled by the
Vision mid-flight during the
Avengers Civil War, causing Rhodes to crash and become
paralyzed. For the
Battle of Earth, Rhodes dons a new suit reminiscent of the original Iron Patriot armor, featuring multiple advanced weapons such as rocket launchers.
The Spider-Man suit (based on the Marvel Comics suit
of the same name) is a suit worn by
Peter Parker while fighting crime as the
vigilante known as Spider-Man. His first suit, a simple homemade costume, consisted of a red hoodie, blue pants, a blue shirt, a red mask with black goggles, and homemade Web-shooters. After Tony Stark recruits him during the
Avengers Civil War, he is given a new, more advanced suit, featuring a more modern and streamlined design,
a built-in AI, improved goggles, a
remote drone, a holographic interface, a parachute, a tracking device, a heater, an airbag, and more advanced Web-shooters.[185]Joe Russo described this suit as "a slightly more traditional,
Steve Ditko influenced suit",[186] while Spider-Man: Homecoming co-producer Eric Hauserman Carroll noted that Marvel intentionally included many "fun and wacky" features from the comics in the suit.[185] He ceases to use this suit during the
Infinity War, instead using the
Iron Spider armor, which offers more protection and abilities. In an effort to conceal Spider-Man's identity,
Talos (disguised as
Nick Fury) has a seamstress make Peter a new stealth suit in Europe, later dubbed the "Night Monkey" suit by
Ned Leeds. This version is entirely black in color, with the hood consisting of a black mask and flip-up goggles. After the suit is stolen by a
prison warden, Peter builds himself a new one using the late Stark's technology, which he uses during his battle against
Mysterio in London. Upon the arrival of multiple villains from alternate realities due to
Stephen Strange's miscasting of a spell intended to erase the world's knowledge of his identity as Spider-Man, Parker battles a displaced
Otto Octavius, who damages the Iron Spider armor and forces Parker to use his defaced red-and-black suit inside-out; after Octavius is cured, he returns the nanotechnology which his tentacles had absorbed onto Parker, embellishing it into a more advanced suit. Later, after Strange erases the world's knowledge of Parker's existence, reconcealing his secret identity as Spider-Man, Parker once again dons a brand new red-and-blue suit stitched from homemade materials in his apartment.[187] Trixter provided visual effects for the Stark suit and the spider drone in Spider-Man: Homecoming, and also applied a rigging, muscle and cloth system to
Sony Pictures Imageworks' homemade suit to "mimic the appearance of the rather loose training suit".[7]
Thanos' armor is a suit of armor worn by Thanos during his time as a warlord. It consists of a helmet, breastplate, greaves, cuisses, gauntlets, and metal boots. He discards the armor following his attack on the Statesman, and uses it as a
scarecrow after he completes his mission and retires to the
Garden. An alternate version of Thanos from 2014 wears the armor during the Battle of Earth, during which the armor is heavily damaged by
Wanda Maximoff. The armor is eventually destroyed by Tony Stark. Gamora kills Thanos in an alternate reality before seizing his armor and blade.[188]
The Time Suits,[189][better source needed] also known as the Advanced Tech Suits[190] or Quantum Suits,[191][192] are a variation of the
Ant-Man suit, allowing the Avengers to shrink down to microscopic size and travel back in time through the
Quantum Realm. They are used by the surviving Avengers and
Guardians of the Galaxy. The suits as depicted in Avengers: Endgame were entirely digital creations, and were designed by
Marvel Studios head of visual development
Ryan Meinerding as a combination of Ant-Man, Iron Man, and the Guardians' technologies.[193]
Captain America's shield (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a weapon made of vibranium used by the bearers of the
Captain America mantle, including Steve Rogers,
John Walker, and
Sam Wilson. It is created by
Howard Stark and given to Rogers during World War II. The shield gets destroyed during the
Battle of Earth. After Rogers' retirement, an alternate version of the shield is given by Wilson to the Smithsonian, but the government passes it to John Walker, who uses it to murder a
Flag Smasher. After he is stripped away of his title as Captain America, John Walker creates a new homemade shield from
scrap metal and his
Medal of Honor, which he later abandons in New York City.[195] The shield is seen as a symbol of Captain America's strength and legacy.[196] A replica of the shield also appears in Iron Man and Iron Man 2, which director
Jon Favreau included because he felt it was important to include
inside references for fans of the comics.[197]
Chitauri guns were the primary weapons used by the
Chitauri during the
Battle of New York. Many of these guns were abandoned on Earth and salvaged by various humans in attempts to reverse-engineer them.
Extremis (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a form of genetic manipulation developed by
Maya Hansen. It gives a person an advanced healing factor, meaning that they are able to regenerate from injury,
deformities, and
psychological trauma, as well as the ability to generate fire.
Aldrich Killian uses it to heal his weak physique and cure injured war veterans such as
Eric Savin and
Ellen Brandt. The rebel
SkrullGravik uses Extremis as part of his
Super-Skrull program, and uses it on himself, as he heals himself after being stabbed in the hand by
Talos.
Gungnir (based on the Norse mythological object
of the same name) was Odin's spear, capable of channelling the
Odinforce. It has also been used by Loki and Thor. The spear was presumably destroyed during
Ragnarök.
The Hammer Drones were
remotely-controlled humanoid
drones designed by
Ivan Vanko and commissioned by
Justin Hammer following his previous failed attempts to recreate the
Iron Man armor. They were designed for use by various branches of the military, with Hammer hoping that they would replace Iron Man. However, Vanko secretly takes control of the drones and used them to wreak havoc at the
Stark Expo, though they are ultimately defeated by Tony Stark and
James Rhodes and destroyed by Vanko.
Hawkeye's bow and quiver are a pair of tools used by
Clint Barton that serve as his primary weapons. The bow is a collapsible
recurve bow, whilst the quiver is mechanized, able to store and deploy his signature trick arrows. After
the Blip, he swaps his bow for a
katana which he uses to murder criminals such as the Japanese
Yakuza.
Hofund (based on the Norse mythological object
of the same name), also known as the Bifröst Sword, is a magical sword used by
Heimdall (and, during his exile,
Skurge) that is able to channel the
Bifröst. It also served as the key to activate the Bifröst. It is last used by Heimdall to transport the
Hulk to Earth before he is killed by
Thanos, and was presumably destroyed along with the Statesman.
The Infinity Gauntlet (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a left-handed metal gauntlet owned by
Thanos and forged from
uru by
Eitri and the Dwarves of
Nidavellir. It is capable of harnessing the power of all six
Infinity Stones at once, thus making the wearer able to do anything in their imagination. A replica of the Gauntlet is also kept by Odin in
his vault on Asgard, which originally appeared in Thor as an
Easter egg before Marvel Studios realized that it could not be the actual one and formulated an internal theory that the gauntlet was a fake, which led to a scene in Thor: Ragnarok where Hela declares it fake.[202]
The Jericho is an experimental
guided missile developed by Stark Industries for the
United States Armed Forces that can separate into 16 smaller missiles when launched. At a demonstration for the weapon in
Afghanistan, Tony Stark's convoy is ambushed, and he is captured by the
Ten Rings, who forces him to build the missile for them. However, Stark secretly builds the first
Iron Man armor and escapes.
Loki's scepter, also known as the Chitauri Scepter[2] or simply as the Scepter, is a bladed weapon with an extendable handle given as a gift to Loki by
Thanos. It has a blue gem at the top containing the
Mind Stone, allowing Loki to
brainwash and mind control others by touching them with it. After the
Battle of New York, it is taken by
Hydra agents disguised as
S.T.R.I.K.E. team agents and used by
Strucker and Dr.
List to unlock and amplify
Wanda and
Pietro Maximoff's abilities. It is later recaptured by the Avengers and used by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner to create
Ultron. Ultron then uses it to brainwash
Helen Cho, who in turn creates the
Vision, with the gem becoming embedded in his forehead. During the
Time Heist,
Steve Rogers uses his knowledge of the future to gain the Scepter from the S.T.R.I.K.E. team before using it to brainwash an alternate version of himself.
Mjölnir (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is an enchanted hammer owned by Thor (and previously, Hela) and made of uru by the Dwarves of Nidavellir that is capable of controlling lightning and allows the user to fly if it is spun rapidly and released with enough power. Before Thor is banished to Earth, Odin enchants the hammer so that only those deemed "worthy" would be able to wield it and be granted the power of Thor, which include the Vision and Steve Rogers. An alternate version of the hammer is acquired by Thor during the
Time Heist, and is later returned to its original timeline by Rogers. The hammer is also used by
Jane Foster when she becomes the Mighty Thor in Thor: Love and Thunder.
The Nano Gauntlet,[203] also known as the Iron Gauntlet[204] or the Power Gauntlet,[205] is a right-handed metal gauntlet created by Tony Stark, Bruce Banner, and
Rocket using Stark nanotechnology. It was designed to harness the power of the Infinity Stones akin to the
Infinity Gauntlet and created to reverse
the Blip. After the Avengers retrieve alternate versions of the six Infinity Stones during the Time Heist, Smart Hulk uses it to snap his fingers and resurrect the lives of half the Universe before an alternate version of Thanos from 2014 arrives and attempts to acquire the Gauntlet for himself. During the subsequent
Battle of Earth, the gauntlet is passed around multiple individuals before ending up in the hands of Thanos, but the Stones are secretly removed by Tony Stark, who snaps his fingers and disintegrates Thanos and his army.
The Necroswords (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) were obsidian swords generated and handled by the Asgardian goddess of death,
Hela, powered with the necro-energy that she transforms from the power she draws from
Asgard. In Thor: Love and Thunder, All-Black the Necrosword is a powerful weapon wielded by the Dark Shadow Lord and later by
Gorr the God Butcher. Gorr obtained the sword from the deceased Shadow Lord and used it to slay his first god.
The Quad Blasters are
Peter Quill's primary weapons. The blasters have two separate triggers controlling two separate barrels, which are fired using the index and middle finger. The bottom barrel of each gun fires non-lethal electric shots, while the top barrel fires lethal plasma shots.
Prop master Russell Bobbitt created two sets of the blasters for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, which contained removable blaster cartridges.[209]
Reset charges are contraptions used by the
Time Variance Authority (TVA) to "prune" alternate timelines, erasing them from existence to preserve the Sacred Timeline.
Michael Waldron, the
head writer of Loki, said the charges use magic "or perhaps something a bit more technical", and that the audience is "kind of in the dark with what is exactly is going on with these reset charges".[210] They are later used by
Sylvie to "bomb" the Sacred Timeline.[211][212][213]
The Shocker's gauntlet is a mechanical weapon originally owned by
Brock Rumlow and ripped off by Steve Rogers in
Lagos. The gauntlet is then recovered by the
Department of Damage Control and stolen by
Adrian Toomes.
Phineas Mason modifies the gauntlet before passing it to
Jackson Brice, who uses the gauntlet while calling himself the "Shocker". After Brice is disintegrated, it is used by
Herman Schultz until his defeat at the hands of
Spider-Man. Visual effects for the gauntlet were provided by Trixter in Spider-Man: Homecoming.[7]
Shuri's gauntlets are a pair of vibranium
gauntlets designed and used by
Shuri. Shaped like a
panther's head, they emit a powerful sonic blast capable of subduing a Black Panther. They are ultimately destroyed by
Killmonger. After Killmonger's demise at the hands of her brother,
T'Challa, Shuri designs a second pair which she uses during the
Battle of Wakanda and the Battle of Earth.
Stormbreaker (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a large battle axe made of uru and forged by Thor and the dwarf king Eitri. The weapon, meant to be the most powerful in the Asgardian king's arsenal, has powers similar to Mjölnir and is also capable of summoning the Bifröst. Unlike Mjölnir, Stormbreaker has no worthiness enchantment, allowing anyone to wield it. Thor nearly dies trying to create it, but before its completion, so
Groot cuts off his own arm to hastily finish Stormbreaker and then Thor heals himself with the completed Stormbreaker. Thor then uses it to defeat the Outriders in Wakanda, attack Thanos, kill him on the
Garden, and during the Battle of Earth.[214]
The Ten Rings (based on the
Mandarin's rings from the Marvel Comics) are a set of ten mystical
iron rings used by
Wenwu and
Shang-Chi,[215] which provide the namesake and emblem for the criminal organization
of the same name.[216] The Rings grant their user enhanced strength and longevity, emit concussive energy blasts, and can be telepathically controlled as projectiles and tendrils.[215] The appearance of the aura projected by the rings varies on the user, with Wenwu's resembling violent blue lightning and Shang-Chi's resembling graceful orange flames to reflect their distinct personalities.[217][138] According to Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings producer
Jonathan Schwartz, the Rings were changed from being worn on the fingers as rings as in the comics to being worn on the wrists was due to its impracticality and similarity with the Infinity Stones.[218] Director
Destin Daniel Cretton also noted that more material regarding the Rings were created but purposely withheld so that they can be explored in future projects,[219] while the film's mid-credits scene was written to leave the Rings' origins ambiguous so that they can be explored in the future.[220] Visual effects for the Rings were provided by
Weta Digital in Shang-Chi, who originally gave the Rings different colors for every functionality;[221] Marvel Studios concept artist Jerad S. Marantz also considered making the Rings green.[222] The Ten Rings were later integrated into mainstream
Marvel Universe.[223]
Thanos' blade[1] is a large double-sided sword used by an alternate version of Thanos from 2014 during the Battle of Earth. Thanos uses it to break
Captain America's shield as well as
Luis' van before it is destroyed by Wanda Maximoff using her telekinetic powers. The blade's design was based on a helicopter used by Thanos in the comics,[224] an
easter egg which Thanos creator
Jim Starlin criticized.[225][226] Gamora kills Thanos in an alternate reality before seizing his armor and blade.[188]
Time Sticks[227] are
batons used by Minutemen of the Time Variance Authority (TVA) to "prune" variants.
Ravonna Renslayer, a former Hunter for the TVA, also wields a baton, which she uses against Loki and Sylvie. When designing the pruning effect for Loki, visual effects vendor
FuseFX sought to differentiate it from
the Blip, taking inspiration from the documentary series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey.[228]
The Ultron Sentries, also known as the Sub-Ultrons, are a large army of robots that acted as extensions of Ultron. They were created by Ultron using resources from the
Hydra Research Base in
Sokovia and were directly controlled by him, thus acting as his personal army. They were ultimately destroyed by the Avengers during the
Battle of Sokovia.
Ulysses Klaue's prosthetic arm is a
prosthetic arm used by
Ulysses Klaue after his arm was chopped off by Ultron. Actually a modified
Wakandan tool used for mining vibranium, it functioned as a
sonic cannon, capable of shooting out high-energy blasts powerful enough to destroy a car and temporarily subdue a
Black Panther. The sonic cannon could be retracted and hidden inside the prosthesis when not in use. It was later destroyed by
T'Challa during a skirmish in
Busan, Korea.
The Web-shooters (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) are a pair of
electromechanical gauntlets developed by Peter Parker for his use as the
crime-fighter known as
Spider-Man. They are capable of shooting synthetic webbing stored in small cartridges on the gauntlets. The first version of the Web-shooters, which were homemade by Parker, are upgraded by Tony Stark before the Avengers Civil War. This version has a variety of different settings, a capability first teased in the
mid-credits scene of Captain America: Civil War. This was compared by Spider-Man: Homecoming co-producer Eric Hauserman Carroll to a
DSLR camera.[42] Visual effects for the synthetic webbing were provided by
Digital Domain and
Sony Pictures Imageworks in Spider-Man: Homecoming, who based the design on
polar bear hair due to its
translucent nature as well as its design in Civil War and
previous Spider-Man films.[229] The
Iron Spider armor also features its own Web-shooters, which are more streamlined and technologically-advanced. After Stark's death, Peter uses his technology to craft himself a new pair after his old ones are destroyed.
The Widow's Bite (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is an electroshock weapon used by Natasha Romanoff in combat. Created by S.H.I.E.L.D., it delivers powerful electrical discharges from two gauntlets worn on the wrists. Tony Stark later creates a more powerful version for her, which causes the piping in her suit to light up and glow. It has been used by Romanoff to momentarily disable the
Winter Soldier's metal arm and the
Black Panther suit, as well as to attack other Black Widows in the
Red Room.
The Yaka arrow (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a sound-sensitive arrow owned by
Yondu Udonta. Made of Yaka metal by the Centaurians, it is controlled by a red fin worn on Yondu's head combined with his
whistling, and is carried in a holster on his belt when not in use. His use of the arrow is extremely skilled, allowing him to accurately control its direction and speed, killing multiple beings within seconds. After Yondu's death,
Kraglin acquires the arrow and a new cybernetic head fin, but struggles to control his arrow due to his lack of experience.
Artifacts
The Bloodstone is a red gem owned by the Bloodstone family, first wielded by
Ulysses Bloodstone. Following Ulysses' death, his widow
Verussa organizes a competition between monster hunters to determine its new wielder.[230][231] Verussa uses the Bloodstone to force
Jack Russell into his
werewolf form, who kills her, and the gem is left behind with Verussa and Ulysses' estranged daughter
Elsa.[232] The Bloodstone is the only object with color for the majority of Werewolf by Night, and grants its wielder increased strength and longevity.[233]
The Book of Cagliostro is an ancient spellbook housed in the
Ancient One's private library in
Kamar-Taj. The book focuses on
dark magic, causing many students who studied the book to lose their way.
Kaecilius tears pages out of the book to allow him to perform a ritual to contact
Dormammu and draw energy from the
Dark Dimension, extending his life forever.
Stephen Strange also studies the book, learning how to use the
Eye of Agamotto.
The Casket of Ancient Winters (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a relic owned and used by the
Frost Giants. When opened, it projects an icy wind that freezes everything in its path, and is capable of plunging an entire planet into a new ice age. The Casket is captured in 965 AD by the
Asgardians, who stored it in
Odin's vault. Over a millennium later, Frost Giants attack Asgard, seeking to reclaim the Casket, but are once again defeated. It is presumably destroyed during Ragnarök.
The Cloak of Levitation (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a magical relic that is enables its user to
levitate in the air. It is one of the many relics owned by the Masters of the Mystic Arts that are originally stored in the
New York Sanctum. It "chooses"
Stephen Strange as its master during a fight with
Kaecilius. It has a
consciousness of its own and is able to move independently and defend Strange against threats. It is later used by Strange during the
Battle of Titan and the
Battle of Earth. During the battle with the universe-displaced villains, the Cloak saves Ned Leeds' life when he falls off of the
Statue of Liberty, apparently of its own volition. Visual effects for the artifact were provided by
Framestore in Doctor Strange.[117]
The Crimson Bands of Cyttorak (based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name) is a magical wooden relic housed in the New York Sanctum. When thrown at an opponent, it restrains them, binding their hands behind their back, with Stephen Strange using it on Kaecilius in Doctor Strange. A second, more comics-accurate version is manifested during Strange's fight with Thanos, a spell that appears as red bands. Visual effects for the original version were provided by
Framestore in Doctor Strange.[117]
The Darkhold (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name), also known as the Book of the Damned, is a magical
grimoire that corrupts the reader and contains spells that the demon Chthon wrote on Mount Wundagore. The book passed through many hands before coming into the possession of
Agatha Harkness, who used it to determine that
Wanda Maximoff is the Scarlet Witch. After defeating Harkness, Maximoff took the book to study it while in hiding, unaware of the book's evils. As a result, the book causes Maximoff to become corrupted. After breaking out of the corruption, she destroys Wundagore and every copy of the Darkhold across the multiverse. The Book of Vishanti serves as the
antithesis to the Darkhold. The Darkhold's appearance in WandaVision was pitched by co-executive producer
Mary Livanos, who felt it would increase the level of danger posed by Harkness to Maximoff.[234] A visually distinct iteration of the book appears in the ABC series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and the Hulu series Runaways, in which it is used by
Holden Radcliffe and
Aida before
Robbie Reyes takes to the Dark Dimension with
Morgan le Fay later bringing it back to Earth.[235] While this had not been discussed by the writers of WandaVision,[236] director
Matt Shakman stated that he believes they are the same book.[237] The Darkhold was designed by the props team of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness for WandaVision,[238] and visual effects were created by
Luma Pictures.[239]
The Macchina di Kadavus,[240] also known as The Box,[241] is a relic owned and used by the
Masters of the Mystic Arts to contain potentially hazardous spells. In 2024, it is used by
Stephen Strange to contain the corrupted Runes of Kof-Kol, before it is destroyed by
Norman Osborn with a
pumpkin bomb, releasing the spell and creating rifts in the multiverse.
Sling Rings are small two-ring mystical artifacts used by the Masters of the Mystic Arts to teleport between different locations via an interdimensional portal.[242] Apart from these Masters, the sling ring is also worn and used by
Ned Leeds.
The Mind Stone, originally housed in
Loki's scepter and later on
Vision's forehead, is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of the
mind. It grants the user the ability to
control minds and give sentience to beings, as well as to project energy blasts. In 2015,
Tony Stark and
Bruce Banner use it to learn to create
Ultron, who later fuses the Stone on the Vision. Exposure to the Mind Stone also granted
Pietro Maximoff superhuman speed and amplified
Wanda's innate magical abilities. Her connection to the Stone also allows her to create a
simulacrum of Vision and two sons,
Billy and
Tommy.
The Power Stone, originally housed in the Orb and later in
Ronan's
Cosmi-Rod, is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of
power. It grants the user superhuman strength and durability, and is capable of overpowering
Carol Danvers.
The Reality Stone, originally in the form of the Aether (based on the classical element
of the same name), was the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of reality. It first appears in a fluid-like state, and grants the user the ability to change reality, create illusions, suck the life force out of mortals, disrupt the laws of physics, and repel any threats that it detects.
The Soul Stone, originally located on the planet
Vormir, is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of the
soul. It grants the user the ability to manipulate living souls, and also contains a pocket dimension called the
Soul World. Uniquely, it has a guard over its location, the Stonekeeper, who guides those through the ritual required to gain it: "a soul for a soul", via a sacrifice.
The Space Stone, originally housed in the Tesseract (based on the
Cosmic Cube from the Marvel Comics),[243] is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of
space. It grants the user the ability to open wormholes and to travel between places instantaneously, and has been used by
Johann Schmidt,
Loki, and
Thanos. The energy generated by the Stone is also used by the
Asgardians to repair the
Bifröst Bridge,
Hydra and
S.H.I.E.L.D. to power weapons, and
Project Pegasus to develop light-speed engines.
The Time Stone, originally housed in the Eye of Agamotto (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name), is the Infinity Stone that controlled the aspect of time. It grants the user the ability to manipulate time and foresee possible futures. It has been used by
Stephen Strange, the
Ancient One, and Thanos.
Creatures
The Abilisk is an interdimensional
tentacled creature that feeds on
Anulax Batteries, the power source of the
Sovereign planetary amalgamation. In 2014, the
Sovereign people hire the
Guardians of the Galaxy to slay the beast, and the creature is killed when
Gamora uses her sword to slice it open.[244] In 2026, the Abilisks are revealed to have been created by the
High Evolutionary. They are seen when
Mantis,
Nebula, and
Drax are thrown in a chamber with them. Mantis calms them down and adopts them, taking them with her on her journey of self discovery. According to
head writerA.C. Bradley, the tentacled monster seen in the
first and
fourth episodes of What If...? was inspired by the Abilisk.[245]
Alioth (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is a cloud-like, matter-consuming entity which resides in the
Void and guards the
Citadel at the End of Time. Alioth was created during the first Multiversal War and was harnessed and weaponized by
He Who Remains to end the war.[246][247]Loki visual development artist Alexander Mandradjiev took inspiration from the anime film Princess Mononoke (1997) when designing Alioth.[248]
Alligator Loki is a
reptilian variant of
Loki which takes the form of an alligator.[249] It was pruned by the Time Variance Authority (TVA) and banished to the
Void. The character was included in Loki "because he's green", according to head writer
Michael Waldron, and was doubled by a stuffed alligator during filming to allow actors to interact with it.[250]
The Dweller-in-Darkness (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is a soul-consuming demon kept imprisoned for thousands of years by the people of
Ta Lo who impersonates Wenwu's deceased wife,
Ying Li, manipulating him into using the
Ten Rings to release it.[253] The Dweller kills Wenwu upon being freed, but is defeated by Shang-Chi. Visual effects for the creature were provided by
Weta Digital in Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, which supplemented its winged, tentacled, and eyeless appearance with a large jaw and tongue. Weta also drew inspiration from a variety of references for each part of its body, including crabs and horns for its armor, a mixture of
porous rock, rhinos and elephants for its skin, and
obsidian for its teeth.[217]
Fenris (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is a 23-foot-tall wolf owned by
Hela, who resurrects it using the
Eternal Flame following her release from
Hel.[254][255] She charges at
Heimdall, preparing to fight him, but is attacked by the
Hulk, who ultimately throws her off
Asgard and into space. Visual effects for the creature in Thor: Ragnarok were provided by
Framestore, which used camera angles and tight framing to communicate her enormous size.[103]
Gargantos (based on
Shuma-Gorath from the Marvel Comics)[256] is an interdimensional octopus-like being sent by
Wanda Maximoff to pursue
America Chavez with the aim of stealing her ability to travel the multiverse. Gargantos and Shuma-Gorath are two different creatures in the comics, with the film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness referring to the creature as Gargantos because the rights to the name Shuma-Gorath are owned by
Heroic Signatures.[257] Its eye was modeled after that of Olsen's to foreshadow her role as the film's antagonist.[258]
The Great Protector is a water
dragon which acts as the guardian of Ta Lo. Thousands of years ago, the Great Protector and the people of Ta Lo sealed the
Dweller-in-Darkness within the Dark Gate. When the Dweller escapes its seal, the Great Protector defeats it with the help of Shang-Chi,
Katy and
Xialing. The Great Protector can bestow her power onto people, giving them the ability to manipulate wind; and her scales can be fashioned into weapons and armor that are effective against the Dweller's forces. A life-sized replica of the dragon's head was built for the production of Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, which Weta Digital then digitally added visual effects to.[259] Weta also based the dragon's eyes on those of
Fala Chen, who portrays
Ying Li in the film,[260] and referenced
sea snakes and eels when designing her flight movements.[217]
Goose (based on
Chewie from the Marvel Comics) is a
Flerken and
Mar-Vell's pet during her time on Earth. In the 1990s, she is found by
Carol Danvers at the
Joint Dark Energy Mission Facility and adopted by
Nick Fury. With the ability to deploy long tentacles from inside her mouth as well as store objects in her stomach, she single-handedly takes out a squad of
Kree soldiers and blinds Fury's left eye with a scratch. In 2018, Goose survived
the Blip, and was taken in under Danvers' care. In 2026, during Danvers's team-up with Monica Rambeau and Kamala Khan, Goose is overseen by the agents of S.A.B.E.R., and begins breeding Flerken eggs around the station, giving birth to numerous offsprings which eventually help evacuate the agents when the S.A.B.E.R. station begins to collapse. She was introduced in Captain Marvel and returned in The Marvels. Hand-drawn pictures of her were seen in Ms. Marvel and she was mentioned on Fury's file in Secret Invasion. An alternate version of Goose also appears in the animated series
What If...? episode "
What If... Peter Quill Attacked Earth's Mightiest Heroes?".
Lucky the Pizza Dog (based on the Marvel Comics creature
of the same name) is
Kate Bishop's pet dog. In December 2024, he was rescued by Bishop in New York City and adopted by her. He then stayed with her and
Clint Barton for a few days until they all moved to Barton's house in Iowa. Kate Bishop relocated to a new apartment in New York City, taking Lucky with her. One night, Lucky witnessed
Kamala Khan break into the place while Bishop was out. When Bishop returned, she gave Lucky a slice of pizza, which he happily ate as Khan introduced herself to Bishop.[261] He was introduced in Hawkeye,[262][263] and reappeared in The Marvels.[261]
Morris (voiced by
Dee Baker)[264] is a six-legged, faceless
hundun who befriends
Trevor Slattery during his imprisonment by the
Ten Rings.[265] Morris later escapes with Slattery, Shang-Chi, Katy, and Xialing and leads them to his home, Ta Lo. The creature was inspired by Shang-Chi director
Destin Daniel Cretton's 15-year-old
dachshund of the same name, and was doubled by a green-screen cushion during filming; the creatives of the film found it difficult to make Morris cute due to it not having eyes or a face to convey emotion, leading them to rely on its fur, feathers, and voice.[266][138] Visual effects for the creature were provided by
Trixter in Shang-Chi, who looked at
wombats and puppies for inspiration.[138][217]
Throg (voiced by
Chris Hemsworth and based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name)[142][268] is a variant of Thor who is turned into a frog at one point in his life. Shortly after this occurred, he is detained by the Time Variance Authority (TVA) in a transparent container and sent to the Void.
Magic
Asgardian magic is a type of magic that is practiced by
Asgardian sorcerers such as
Loki,
Frigga,
Sylvie,
Odin,
Thor and
Heimdall. This form of magic has many colors, with Loki's and Sylvie's magic being a bright green and Thor's being
lightning based.
The Odinforce (based on the Marvel Comics energy
of the same name) is a powerful mystical energy used by Odin in his capacity as King of Asgard. It is the source of power for his spear,
Gungnir, also passed down through the Kings of Asgard, and is the power source and weapon of the
Destroyer. It is periodically replenished by entering the Odinsleep, a state that leaves the user vulnerable. The parts of the disabled Destroyer are later assembled into a prototype gun.
Chaos magic is an extremely powerful and rare form of magic that gives the user the ability to alter reality, wielded by
Wanda Maximoff, thus making her the
Scarlet Witch, a being once thought to be mythical. This form of magic's primary color is red mixed with white and black hues.
Dark magic is a type of magic that harnesses energies from the Dark Dimension, practiced by
Agatha Harkness, Morgan la Fey, Nico Minoru,
Kaecilius and his Zealots, and the
Ancient One. In the case of Nico and Kaecilius's group, the usage of this form of magic without protection is corrosive with the latter forming a direct link to Dormammu. Asgardians like
Odin and
Heimdall can use it. A darker version of Stephen Strange dubbed "
Doctor Strange Supreme" also practices dark magic. This form of magic's color is either red or purple.
E.D.I.T.H. (voiced by Dawn Michelle King), which stands for Even Dead, I'm the Hero, is an advanced
augmented realityartificial intelligence with numerous security, defense and tactical abilities created by
Tony Stark and built into
his pair of sunglasses. Following his death, the sunglasses are handed over to
Peter Parker, giving him access to the AI as well as
Stark Industries' large arsenal of missiles and weaponized drones.
Griot (voiced by
Trevor Noah)[271][272] is
Shuri's artificial intelligence. The name "
Griot" is a West African term for a historian or storyteller.[273]
J.A.R.V.I.S. (voiced by
Paul Bettany) is a complex artificial intelligence matrix created by Tony Stark and named after his father's butler,
Edwin Jarvis.[274] It is used by Stark to operate his technology,
his mansion,
Avengers Tower, and his company.[275] While he is eventually destroyed by
Ultron, his operational matrix is uploaded by Stark and
Bruce Banner into a new body, becoming the
Vision.[276] According to the novelization of the first Iron Man film, the acronym stands for Just A Rather Very Intelligent System.[277]
Karen (voiced by
Jennifer Connelly), initially called "Suit Lady", is the name given by Peter Parker for the natural-language user interface created by Tony Stark and embedded in his second
Spider-Man suit.[278] Originally hidden until Parker had completed the
Training Wheels Protocol, Karen is unlocked by
Ned Leeds after he hacks into the suit, and is destroyed along with the suit following an attack by
Mysterio in Europe. Spider-Man: Homecoming co-writer
Jonathan Goldstein was initially skeptical of the idea, feeling that it was too similar to J.A.R.V.I.S. and F.R.I.D.A.Y.[279]
K.E.V.I.N. (voiced by an uncredited
Brian T. Delaney), which stands for Knowledge Enhanced Visual Interconnectivity Nexus, is an advanced
artificial intelligence which in She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is revealed to be the mastermind behind all Marvel Cinematic Universe storyline decisions. She-Hulk had to go through Marvel Studios: Assembled on the
Disney+ app to file a complaint to K.E.V.I.N. about the confusing storyline done in her show's final episode. It is depicted as operating through a robot in a secure room inside Marvel Studios where the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe can be surveyed simultaneously. Elements of the robot and A.I., including its name, call back to Marvel Studios President
Kevin Feige, who helped the show's head writer
Jessica Gao with the show's season finale.[280]
Mainframe (voiced by
Miley Cyrus and then by
Tara Strong and based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name), is an artificial intelligence and a leader of Mainframe Ravager Clan, as well as a member of Stakar Ogord's Team.
The Supreme Intelligence (portrayed by various actors and based on the Marvel Comics character
of the same name) is an artificial intelligence that is the ruler of the
Kree.[295][296] The Supreme Intelligence takes the physical form of the individual most respected by whoever is speaking to it when the person is hooked up to it. To
Vers, it takes the form of Dr.
Wendy Lawson (portrayed by
Annette Bening), though Vers was initially unaware of who Lawson is due to her
amnesia.[297] A deleted scene had the Supreme Intelligence assuming the form of
Yon-Rogg (portrayed by
Jude Law) when chastising him, reflecting his
ego.[298] In 1995, the Supreme Intelligence sends Vers on a mission to Torfa to extract an undercover Kree operative, but the mission backfires and Vers is captured by a
Skrull faction led by
Talos. After Vers regains her memories and learns her true identity, she fights the Supreme Intelligence before defeating the
Starforce.
Elements
Uru (based on the Marvel Comics element
of the same name) is a metal used by the
Dwarves to forge the weapons
Mjölnir and
Stormbreaker, and the
Infinity Gauntlet. It has magical properties. The metal is forged in the furnaces of
Nidavellir as it is so powerful that only the heat of a dying star can melt it.
Vibranium (based on the Marvel Comics element
of the same name) is a metal used to create
Captain America's shield, the
Black Panther suit, the
Vision,
Sam Wilson's Captain America suit and the
Winter Soldier's cybernetic arm. It came from a
meteorite collision with Earth and is regarded as the strongest metal in the world, stronger than steel and a third of the weight.[299] The Wakandans originally hid it for years, and it thus became rare and extremely expensive, allowing vibranium smugglers such as
Ulysses Klaue to make billions of dollars. Vibranium is also shown to be
bulletproof to most high-caliber
bullets.[299] It is also absorbent of sound, vibration, and
kinetic energy, and can deflect high-energy blasts.[300] Its main source is Mount Bashenga in
Wakanda, but it is eventually revealed at least a few other meteorites brought vibranium in small amounts to other parts of the world.
Projects and initiatives
The Avengers Initiative, originally known as the Protector Initiative, is the initiative for gathering a group of superheroes from various backgrounds, described as "a group of remarkable people", into the
Avengers, to protect Earth from various threats. It was initiated by
Nick Fury in the 1990s and was renamed in honor of Carol Danvers'
call sign, "Avenger". In 2011, Fury directs
Natasha Romanoff to measure
Tony Stark's suitability for the initiative, though Stark was initially rejected and only used as a consultant. Fury also recruits
Steve Rogers,
Bruce Banner, and
Thor, and also assigns
S.H.I.E.L.D. agents Romanoff and
Clint Barton to the team.
Cataract is a project conducted by
S.W.O.R.D. with the goal of reactivating the
Vision as a "sentient weapon" following his death at the hands of
Thanos during the
Infinity War. Under Acting Director
Tyler Hayward's orders, S.W.O.R.D. acquires the Vision's body following the Battle of Wakanda and dismantles it, hoping to study its components and rebuild it. Though initially unsuccessful, S.W.O.R.D. uses energy collected from
Wanda Maximoff on a
Stark Industries drone to reactivate the Vision, turning his body white in the process.
Project Rebirth (based on
Weapon I from the Marvel Comics), also known as the Super Soldier Program, is a collaboration between U.S., British and German scientists led by Dr.
Abraham Erskine under the supervision of
Peggy Carter,
Howard Stark, and
Chester Phillips to create a new breed of super-soldiers. The first successful test leads to the creation of Captain America by enhancing the sickly
Steve Rogers, but is abandoned following the assassination of Erskine by
Heinz Kruger.
The Red Room (based on the Marvel Comics program
of the same name), also known as the Black Widow Program, is a top-secret Soviet (and later Russian) training program led by
Dreykov. The program takes young orphan girls and turns them into elite assassins named "Black Widows", and is overseen by various individuals, including Madame B. and
Melina Vostokoff. Graduates of the program include
Natasha Romanoff and
Yelena Belova. It was terminated in 2016 following the destruction of the Red Room's headquarters. In an alternate universe seen in What If...?, the Red Room captures Steve Rogers in 1953 and brainwashes him into being an assassin rather than Hydra brainwashing Bucky Barnes. During a final confrontation between the brainwashed Rogers, the Black Widows, led by Vostokoff, and Romanoff and Captain Carter, Carter manages to break through to Rogers who destroys the Red Room's headquarters, seemingly at the cost of his own life.
The Sokovia Accords (based on the
Registration Acts from the Marvel Comics), officially titled the Sokovia Accords: Framework for the Registration and Deployment of Enhanced Individuals,[303] are a group of legislative
documents ratified by the United Nations (UN), with the support of 117 countries, following the
Battle of Sokovia. They establish UN oversight over the Avengers, and were supported by Tony Stark, James Rhodes, the Vision, T'Challa, and Natasha Romanoff and opposed by Steve Rogers, Sam Wilson, and Clint Barton, leading to the
Avengers Civil War.
The Ultron Program is an attempt by Tony Stark and Bruce Banner to create an artificial intelligence, "
Ultron", as a means of protecting the world against incoming extraterrestrial threats. The program becomes a failure, with the program being infected due to the Mind Stone and turning genocidal, seeking to wipe out the
human race.
The Winter Soldier Program is a top secret
Hydra super-soldier program started by
Nazi scientist Dr.
Arnim Zola in the 1940s. It took soldiers, brainwashed them, and enhanced them with a recreation of the
Super Soldier Serum, turning them into a deadly assassins known as "Winter Soldiers", who were kept in
cryostasis whilst not on a mission. Each soldier had a set of codewords, recorded in the
Winter Soldier Book, which, when recited to a Winter Soldier, would make them completely obedient to that person. The Winter Soldiers, with the exception of
Bucky Barnes, are later executed by
Helmut Zemo.
Terms and phrases
"Avengers, assemble!" is a rallying cry for the
Avengers.
The Black Widow antidote is a red-colored synthetic gas stored in vials which acts as the antidote to the chemical mind-control that the Red Room employs on its Black Widows and
Taskmaster, created by a rogue former Black Widow.
Yelena Belova and
Natasha Romanoff acquire the antidote in 2016 and use it to free various Widows.
The Heart-shaped herb is a
Wakandan plant enriched through exposure to
vibranium, giving it a glowing purple color. It is ingested in a ceremony by the new Black Panther, granting them superhuman abilities. It also allows for the communication with the dead in the
Ancestral Plane upon ingestion. After becoming King of Wakanda,
N'Jadaka ingests the herb and orders the rest of the stocks to be incinerated. One of them is extracted by
Nakia, who uses it to heal
T'Challa. Shuri laters attempts to develop a synthetic Heart-shaped herb, eventually succeeding and allowing her to receive the same enhancements that N'Jadaka and T'Challa had acquired.
Pym Particles (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) are extradimensional subatomic particles capable of reducing or increasing the distance between atoms, allowing the user to shrink or grow. The formula for the particles was created by
Hank Pym and they appear in the form of a liquid stored in vials. They appear red when used to shrink and blue when used to grow. The particles also power Pym Discs and the
Wasp's blasters, and are used by the
Avengers to time-travel via the Quantum Realm during the
Time Heist.
The Super Soldier Serum (based on the Marvel Comics object
of the same name) is a serum used to enhance humans to the peak of human perfection. It was originally developed by Dr.
Abraham Erskine and was given to
Johann Schmidt (turning him into the
Red Skull) and
Steve Rogers (turning him into
Captain America). After Erksine's death, numerous other versions of the serum are created with varying degrees of success. Hydra used a version of the serum to transform Bucky Barnes into the
Winter Soldier, and later used variants of the serum taken from Howard Stark after
his assassination to enhance other assassins as well, but the program fails and is shut down. Another serum was given to
Isaiah Bradley by the
U.S. government during the
Cold War, allowing him to confront and defeat the Winter Soldier in combat.
Bruce Banner tried to replicate the serum using
gamma radiation as a substitute for vita radiation, turning him into the Hulk. Meanwhile, a more successful version of the serum was given to
Emil Blonsky by the U.S. government, and Dr. Wilfred Nagel replicated the serum and gave them to the
Power Broker until they were stolen by
Karli Morgenthau and the Flag Smashers. Helmut Zemo later destroys all but one of the vials, which is taken by
John Walker.
Technologies
The Arc reactor is an energy source originally designed by
Howard Stark and
Anton Vanko, and later independently built by their sons,
Tony and
Ivan. It was initially designed as part of an attempt to replicate the
Tesseract's energy based on Howard's study of the object. Tony Stark eventually builds two versions—a large industrial reactor for powering his machines at the
Stark Industries Headquarters, and a miniature version embedded in his chest to power
his armor (also known as an RT) and prevent the
shrapnel from reaching his heart. The first miniature version used a
palladium core, although he later synthesizes
a new element when the palladium begins to poison him. He continues to develop the reactor throughout the years (even after the shrapnel is removed from his body), with the final version containing nanobots that make up his armor. Ivan Vanko,
James Rhodes, and
Pepper Potts also use arc reactors in their armors.
Max Dillon from an alternate universe also briefly uses one before it is removed by
Otto Octavius, also from an alternate universe and takes it back with him to his reality.[304]
B.A.R.F., which stands for Binarily Augmented Retro-Framing, is a
holographic technology created by
Quentin Beck during his time at
Stark Industries. Despite the technology's potential, Stark used the technology for therapeutic purposes and gave it a deliberately humorous name, humiliating and disgusting Beck. After he is fired for his unstable nature, Beck further developed the technology and equipped drones with advanced holographic projectors to create large monsters known as
Elementals.
Dum-E is Tony Stark's
automatedhydraulic arm. Built by a young Stark in his father Howard's garage, it acts as his workshop assistant, and often "hands" him things, such as bringing his arc reactor when Stark was unable to reach it due to having his previous one stolen by
Obadiah Stane. However, Dum-E has also often been of annoyance to Stark.[305] In 2013, it is severely damaged by
Aldrich Killian's attack on
his mansion and later pulled out of the wreckage and hauled away by Stark. By 2024, it has been fully repaired and moved into
Happy Hogan's apartment.[306]
Kimoyo Beads are an advanced piece of technology developed by
Shuri and used in
Wakanda. They are made to serve a vast range of purposes according to the needs of the wearer, such as deprogramming
Bucky Barnes.
Nick Fury's pager is a
pager belonging to
Nick Fury that was upgraded by
Carol Danvers before she left Earth. With the new enhancements, it could now contact her no matter where she was in the galaxy, although he was only to use it in the event of an emergency. Nick Fury activates it for the first time in years during
the Blip, prompting Danvers to return to Earth and meet the surviving Avengers.
Peter Quill's Walkman is a
Sony TPS-L2 Walkman given to
Peter Quill by his mother,
Meredith, when he was a child. It contained a
cassette tape titled Awesome Mix Vol. 1 which included a series of songs from the
1960s and
1970s, incorporated by Guardians of the Galaxy director
James Gunn as "cultural reference points" to remind audiences of Quill's Earthly origins.[307][308] Deeply cherished by Quill, he happened to have his Walkman on him when abducted by
Yondu, which he continued to listen to during his adult years. Following the
Battle of Xandar, Quill opens a gift from his mother, which is revealed to be another
mixtape titled Awesome Mix Vol. 2, described by Gunn as "better" and "more diverse" than Vol. 1.[309][310] After his Walkman is destroyed by
Ego, Kraglin gives him a
Zune formerly owned by Yondu as a replacement, a scene which
Microsoft was displeased with.[311][312]
The Quantum Tunnel is an inter-dimensional gateway designed by
Hank Pym,
Bill Foster, and
Elihas Starr to transport individuals to and from the
Quantum Realm. Six versions of the tunnel have been created over time: the first incarnation was built by Pym, Foster, and Starr but was destroyed in an explosion; a second version of the tunnel was used by Pym and
Hope van Dyne to rescue
Janet van Dyne from the Quantum Realm; a third version was placed inside
Luis' van and used to send
Scott Lang into the Quantum Realm to acquire quantum energy to heal
Ava Starr; a fourth tunnel designed by Tony Stark, Bruce Banner, and Rocket was used by the
Avengers to travel back in time to collect the six
Infinity Stones in alternate timelines; a fifth was created shortly after the
Battle of Earth by Banner to send
Steve Rogers back in time to return the
Infinity Stones and
Mjölnir back to their respective timelines; and a sixth tunnel was used by
Leo Fitz,
Jemma Simmons, and
Enoch to travel across different timelines.
Redwing (based on the Marvel Comics animal
of the same name), officially designated the Stark Drone MK82 922 V 80Z V2 Prototype Unit V6,[313] is an advanced
drone used in combat and
reconnaissance by
Sam Wilson. It was originally designed by
Stark Industries after Wilson joins the
Avengers, and was equipped into his
EXO-7 Falcon suit. In 2023, Wilson acquires a new version of the drone along with a new combat suit, but the drone is destroyed by
Karli Morgenthau. Wilson later uses a new version of the drone along with
his uniform as Captain America, both designed in Wakanda.
The Regeneration Cradle is a piece of medical equipment created by Dr.
Helen Cho that is able to heal serious injuries by grafting artificial tissue onto them.
Clint Barton's life is saved through this treatment.
Ultron later brainwashes Dr. Cho using
Loki's scepter into grafting the tissue to the
Mind Stone and
vibranium to create a new body for himself. The Avengers intervene, and with
Thor's help, the new body is awoken and dubbed the "
Vision".
TemPads are devices used by the
Time Variance Authority (TVA) to travel through time. Their interface was inspired by
SNES video games and
Game Boys, with Loki director
Kate Herron describing them as "the closest thing to our phones" that the TVA has.[314] The TemPads create Time Doors, amber-colored
interdimensional portals used by the TVA to travel between alternate timelines to preserve the Sacred Timeline. They can also lead to Time Cells, where prisoners are forever stuck in
time loops and the Doors are colored red.
FuseFX, which provided the portals' visual effects for the first season of Loki, explained that this color change was to reflect the amount of suffering which
Loki undergoes when inside the Time Cells.[315]
Thor's prosthetic eye is a
bionic eye that he wears in his left eye socket, replacing the organic one gouged out by Hela. He is given it by Rocket, who stole it from one of Yondu's Ravagers, Vorker, who takes the eye out when he sleeps. Rocket stored it in his rectum until giving it to Thor. The eye has a brown
iris, in contrast to Thor's natural blue eyes.
The Time-Keepers (voiced by
Jonathan Majors[316] and based on the Marvel Comics characters
of the same name) were three
androids created by
He Who Remains to pose as the creators of the Time Variance Authority (TVA). Believed to be alive by workers of the TVA, statues of them and their likenesses are featured in several locations throughout the
TVA's headquarters. Majors voicing both the Time-Keepers and their controller He Who Remains is a reference to The Wizard of Oz (1939).[316]
Tony Stark's glasses are a pair of technologically advanced sunglasses created by him. They are able to polarize and contain his AI
F.R.I.D.A.Y. After his death, F.R.I.D.A.Y. is replaced by
E.D.I.T.H., passing into the hands of Peter Parker. Parker passes them on to Quentin Beck, who uses them to better control his illusions, before reacquiring them in London.
The Universal Neural Teleportation Network[317] is the universal system for space travel. The system enables spaceships to travel through hexagonal-shaped wormholes known as jump points to
instanteneously travel between planetary systems.[318] According to Yondu, it is not healthy for a
mammalian lifeform to go through more than fifty jumps at once, which will result in extreme discomfort and
temporary disfigurement for those on board.[319] By 2024, a
S.A.B.E.R. space station has been established outside Earth, near a jump point.[320]
The Bifröst Bridge (based on the Norse mythological location
of the same name), often simply referred to as the Bifröst, is an energy that allows for near-instantaneous travel via a
wormhole, used primarily for travel within the
Nine Realms by
Asgardians. The energy is harnessed using the
Rainbow Bridge, which connected to
Himinbjörg.
Loki intends to use this to destroy
Jotunheim, proving himself worthy of the throne to Odin, but his plans are foiled after
Thor destroys the Rainbow Bridge. The Bridge is later repaired using the
Tesseract, but destroyed again during
Ragnarok. The energy can also be generated through
dark magic and using
Stormbreaker. Visual effects of the Bifröst in Thor were influenced by
Hubble photography as well as other images of deep space,[114] and were done by
BUF Compagnie and
Fuel VFX.[329][330]
The Captain America PSAs are a series of
public service announcements starring
Captain America dressed in
his 2012 suit.[331]The President's Challenge served as an inspiration for one of the videos centered on "Captain America's Fitness Challenge", with Spider-Man: Homecoming director
Jon Watts believing that Captain America would be the obvious version of that in the MCU.[332] Another PSA discussed
school detention and
puberty, which became an
internet meme following the release of Homecoming.[333][334] A
post-credits scene of that film features a third PSA video of Rogers lecturing the audience on the value of patience, a
meta-reference to the fact that the film's audience had waited through the film's credits just to see that scene and a "last-minute addition" to the film.[335][336] Five additional PSAs featuring Avengers were conceived but ultimately unrealized.[337][338]
The Contest of Champions (based on the Marvel Comics storyline
of the same name) is a gladiator tournament held on
Sakaar by the
Grandmaster. His tower displays models of the heads of past champions, which resemble
Man-Thing,
Ares,
Bi-Beast, Dark-Crawler,
Fin Fang Foom, and
Beta Ray Bill from the comics in addition to the
Hulk.[339][340] Other gladiators include Thor,
Korg, and
Miek. Loki lands on the planet as well but is able to ingratiate himself with the Grandmaster and watches the games from his private
box. When designing the gladiator arena on Sakaar for Thor: Ragnarok, production designer
Dan Hennah studied
Roman gladiators and decided to go "all alien with it", surrounding the arena with "standing up bleachers".[112]
The Elementals (based on the Marvel Comics team
of the same name) are a series of illusions created by the use of projectors and drones used by
Quentin Beck to wreak havoc across the world. To mask their nature, Beck claimed that the Elementals were superpowered entities from Earth-833 that emerged from an inter-dimensional rift caused by the Snap. This iteration consists of the Wind, Earth, Fire, and Water Elementals; who are modeled after
Cyclone,
Sandman,
Molten Man, and
Hydro-Man respectively.[341] Quentin Beck, operating under the guise of Mysterio, claimed that they were born in a black hole and ravaged his reality of Earth-833. After Mysterio defeats the Wind and Earth Elementals
off-screen, he goes on to fight the Water Elemental in Venice while
Nick Fury and
Maria Hill persuade
Spider-Man to help Mysterio defeat the Fire Elemental in Prague. After finding a holographic projector, Peter Parker and
MJ learn the truth and are hunted down by Beck and his accomplices, who create an Elemental fusion monster to distract the world while he sets out to kill them. His plans are foiled when Spider-Man deactivates the drones.
The Emergence is an
apocalyptic event that results in a new
Celestial being born after being incubated in a
planet's core for millennia while the planet's
native population flourishes on the surface. Once a planet's population reaches a suitable amount, the Celestial bursts through the planet's
mantle and
crust, destroying its egg along with its inhabitants to propagate life elsewhere in the Universe.[342] A group of ten
Eternals are sent by the Celestial
Arishem to Earth to eradicate the invasive
Deviants and ensure the continual growth and advancement of Earth's population, but they instead develop a love for humanity and prevent the Emergence of the Celestial
Tiamut after
the Blip temporarily delays the event.[343]
Killmonger's scars are a series of around 3000 self-inflicted "
crocodile scars" covering
Erik "Killmonger" Stevens' body. Each one represents a confirmed kill from his time as an American
black opsNavy SEAL. The scars are intended to resemble the scar tattoos of the
Mursi and
Surma tribes,[344] and consisted of 90 individually sculpted silicone molds that took two-and-a-half hours to apply.[345]Michael B. Jordan, who portrays Killmonger, had to sit in a sauna for two hours at the end of the day to remove the prosthetics when filming Black Panther.[177]
Look Out for the Little Guy is a memoir written by
Scott Lang sometime after
the Blip, chronicling his adventures as an
Avenger.[348][349] Lang spends much of his time post-Blip conducting
book signings, which infuriates his daughter
Cassie.[350][351] As part of a
viral marketing campaign in promotion for Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania,
Hyperion Avenue announced it would publish a real-life version of Look Out for the Little Guy in September 2023, featuring "over 20 short pieces exploring different aspects of [Lang]'s experiences" as a father and Avenger.[352] That book was written by author
Rob Kutner and Quantumania screenwriter
Jeff Loveness.[353]
Mahd Wy'ry is a
psychotic episode which affects
Thena, causing her to seemingly lose control and attack her teammates. Mistakenly believed by the Eternals to be a form of
dementia affecting her
perception of time due to her enormous amount of memory,
Gilgamesh volunteers to be her guardian and lives
off-the-grid with her in Australia for hundreds of years.[354] The Eternals eventually learn that the condition is actually a result of Thena recalling memories from her past missions, which had supposedly been erased from their minds by Arishem.[155] Thena actress
Angelina Jolie and her Eternals co-star
Salma Hayek found this element of the story moving, comparing the condition to women suffering from
mental illnesses.[355]
Steve Rogers' notebook is a small
notebook originally belonging to
Steve Rogers which he used to keep a list of notable items, people, events, and
pop culture elements which he missed during his time in
suspended animation. The things noted on the list vary by the region where Captain America: The Winter Soldier was released.[364] Later, the notebook was passed on to Rogers' best friend,
Bucky Barnes, who used it to keep a list of people whom he had
wronged during
his time as the Winter Soldier.[365][366] Eventually, after Barnes finishes making amends with everyone on the list, he leaves the notebook with his therapist, Dr. Christina Raynor, thanking her for her help.[367]
WandaVision is a sitcom broadcast by
Wanda Maximoff in the
Westview anomaly using her
Chaos Magic abilities. Set in the town of
Westview, New Jersey, the sitcom centered on Wanda Maximoff's family, which included the
Vision,
Billy Maximoff, and
Tommy Maximoff. It also "starred"
Agatha Harkness as Agnes,
Ralph Bohner as
Pietro Maximoff,
Monica Rambeau as Geraldine, Todd and Sharon Davis as Arthur and Mrs. Hart, Abilash Tandon as Norm, Harold and Sarah Proctor as Phil and Dottie Jones, John Collins as Herb, Isabel Matsueda as Beverly, an unknown actor as Dennis, and
Darcy Lewis as an unnamed character. The show was ultimately "
canceled" by Wanda (as described by
Tyler Hayward) after her actions were discovered by the Vision and S.W.O.R.D. and she expanded the Hex to save the Vision's "life".
The Winter Soldier Book is a book formerly used by
Hydra which contained Russian trigger words that would activate their Winter Soldiers into deadly assassins when spoken. It was later discovered by
Helmut Zemo and used to activate Barnes into the Winter Soldier, using the words from the book: "Longing, rusted, seventeen, daybreak, furnace, nine, benign, homecoming, one, freight car".[a] The trigger words' effect is eventually nullified after Barnes is healed in Wakanda.
The Kree–Skrull War (995 AD–present) (based on the Marvel Comics storyline
of the same name) is an ongoing thousand-year-long conflict between the
Kree and
Skrulls, with the Kree striving to wipe out the entire Skrull race.[368] In the 20th Century, the Kree scientist
Mar-Vell rebels and travels to Earth to help Skrull refugees escape from Kree forces and later assists
Carol Danvers.
The Cold War (1947–1991) was a period of
geopolitical tension between the United States and the
Soviet Union during which the U.S. experimented with the Super Soldier Serum on Black soldiers, resulting in the creation of the super-soldier
Isaiah Bradley. Meanwhile, Hydra (having infiltrated the Soviet Union) establishes the
Winter Soldier Program and the
Red Room, transforming
Bucky Barnes and
Natasha Romanoff into elite assassins.
The assassination of Howard and Maria Stark (1991) was the murder of
Howard and
Maria Stark by a brainwashed Bucky Barnes under Vasily Karpov's control on December 16, 1991, in
Long Island, New York. When the couple are on their way to
the Pentagon, Barnes arrives on a motorcycle and slashes the front tire of their car, causing it to crash before
beating Howard to death and
strangling Maria. The assassination is covered as a car crash, results in
Obadiah Stane assuming control of
Stark Industries, and is used by
Helmut Zemo to instigate tensions between
Tony Stark and Steve Rogers during the
Avengers Civil War.
The Battle of Sokovia (2015) was a battle in Sokovia between the Avengers and Ultron, with Ultron attempting to cause
human extinction by dropping the capital city of Sokovia on Earth. The plan is foiled after the city is destroyed by the Avengers, and Ultron is killed by the
Vision. In an alternate reality explored in
the eighth episode of What If...?, Ultron successfully transfers his consciousness to the Vision's body and gains the power of the
Infinity Stones.[378]
The Blip (2018–2023) was the five-year period between the
extermination of half of all life in the universe by Thanos and their subsequent resurrection by Bruce Banner.[381] It manifested in the form of the mass disintegration of individual beings into ashes, while the reversal had the same ashes reforming into the previously deceased individuals, who mostly reappeared in the same location with no direct awareness of what occurred. The
Global Repatriation Council (GRC) is later set up to aid those displaced by the Blip, although many such as the
Flag Smashers oppose their efforts.
The Battle of Earth (2023) was a large-scale battle that took place in the ruins of the
Avengers Compound between the Avengers,
Guardians of the Galaxy,
Masters of the Mystic Arts,
Asgardians,
Ravagers, and
Wakandans and alternate versions of
Thanos and his army from 2014. After defeating
Tony Stark,
Thor, and
Steve Rogers, Thanos summons his army from the Sanctuary II with the goal of acquiring the Nano Gauntlet, but is interrupted by the arrival of the restored Guardians, Asgardians, Ravagers, and Wakandans. The two sides clash, and the battle culminates with Stark sacrificing himself to disintegrate Thanos and his army.
^On the Frontline: An Inside Look at Captain America's Battlegrounds (Featurette). Captain America: The Winter Soldier Blu-Ray:
Walt Disney Home Entertainment. 2014.