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Make the Universe Great Again Thanos

Supervillain appearing in Marvel Comics publications and related media

Thanos
Thanos Infinity 4.png

Textless variant cover of Infinity #4 (Oct 2013).
Art past Jerome Opeña and Dustin Weaver.

Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
Showtime advent The Invincible Iron Man #55 (Feb 1973)
Created by Jim Starlin
In-story data
Species Eternal–Deviant hybrid
Place of origin Titan
Team affiliations Infinity Watch
Blackness Order
Notable aliases The Mad Titan
Abilities
  • Superhuman strength, speed, stamina, durability, and agility
  • Superhuman physiology of Eternals
  • Skilled manus-to-hand combatant
  • Genius-level tactician
  • Plasma energy project
  • Immortality
  • Nigh-invulnerability
  • Possessed access to nearly all powerful mystical artifacts and weapons

Thanos is a supervillain actualization in American comic books published past Marvel Comics. He was created past writer-artist Jim Starlin, and made his commencement appearance in The Invincible Iron Man #55 (comprehend date Feb 1973). An Eternal–Deviant warlord from the moon Titan, Thanos is regarded as one of the most powerful beings in the Curiosity Universe. He has clashed with many heroes including the Avengers, the Guardians of the Galaxy, the Fantastic Iv, and the X-Men.

While usually portrayed as an evil-bent villain, many stories have alternatively depicted Thanos as having a twisted moral compass and thinking of his actions every bit justified. The graphic symbol's perchance all-time-known office came in the 1991 storyline The Infinity Gauntlet, the culmination of several previous story arcs, which saw him successfully assembling the six Infinity Gems into a single gauntlet and using them to kill one-half of the universe's population, including many of its heroes, in an effort to earn the affection of Mistress Death, the living apotheosis of decease in the Curiosity Universe. Although these events were later undone, the storyline has remained ane of the nigh popular published by Marvel.

Debuting in the Bronze Historic period of comic books, the character has appeared in almost five decades of Marvel publications, besides as many media adaptations, including animated television series and video games. In the Curiosity Cinematic Universe, the grapheme was first played by Damion Poitier in the flick The Avengers (2012) and then by Josh Brolin in Guardians of the Galaxy (2014), Avengers: Historic period of Ultron (2015), Avengers: Infinity State of war (2018), Avengers: Endgame (2019), and the start flavour of the animated series What If...? (2021).

Origin

Author-artist Jim Starlin originally conceived of Thanos of Titan during college psychology classes. As Starlin described:

I went to college between doing U.South. military service and getting piece of work in comics, and there was a psych course and I came upwardly with Thanos ... and Drax the Destroyer, but I'chiliad not sure how he fit into it, just anger management probably. So I came up to Marvel, and editor Roy Thomas asked if I wanted to exercise an issue of Atomic number 26 Homo. I felt that this may be my just chance ever to do a graphic symbol, not having the confidence that my career was going to last anything longer than a few weeks. So they got jammed into it. Thanos was a much thinner grapheme and Roy suggested beefing him up, then he'due south beefed up quite a bit from his original sketches ... and subsequently on I liked beefing him up so much that he connected to grow in size.[1]

Starlin has admitted the character's expect was influenced past Jack Kirby'southward Darkseid:

Kirby had washed the New Gods, which I thought was terrific. He was over at DC at the time. I came up with some things that were inspired by that. You'd recall that Thanos was inspired by Darkseid, but that was not the example when I showed up. In my first Thanos drawings, if he looked like anybody, it was Metron. I had all these unlike gods and things I wanted to do, which became Thanos and the Titans. Roy took one wait at the guy in the Metron-like chair and said: "Beef him up! If you're going to steal ane of the New Gods, at least rip off Darkseid, the really proficient one!"[2]

Publication history

Thanos'south first appearance was in The Invincible Iron Homo #55 (Feb 1973), featuring a story by Jim Starlin that was co-scripted by Mike Friedrich. The storyline from that issue continued through Captain Curiosity #25–33 (bi-monthly: March 1973 – Jan. 1974), Marvel Feature #12 (Nov. 1973), Daredevil #107 (January. 1974), and Avengers #125 (July 1974). He returned in an extended storyline that spanned Strange Tales #178–181 (Feb.–Aug. 1975), Warlock #9-11 (Oct. 1975 – January. 1976), Marvel Squad Up #55 (March 1977), and the 1977 Annuals for Avengers and Marvel Two-in-One (Thanos does not actually announced until the end of Warlock #9). He was also featured in a short fill-in story in Logan'due south Run #half dozen (June 1977) and had a modest role in the Decease of Helm Marvel graphic novel (April 1982).

The character was revived in Argent Surfer vol. 3, #34 (Feb. 1990) and guest-starred until issue #59 (Nov 1991), while simultaneously actualization in The Thanos Quest #1–two (Sept.–October. 1990) and The Infinity Gauntlet #one–6 (July–Dec. 1991). Later on an appearance in Spider-Human being #17 (Dec. 1991), Thanos had a recurring part in Warlock and the Infinity Lookout man #1–42 (February. 1992 – Aug. 1995). This was followed by crossover appearances in Infinity War #i–half-dozen (June – Nov. 1992), Infinity Crusade #ane–half-dozen (June – Nov. 1993), Silver Surfer vol. 3, #86–88 (Nov. 1993 – January. 1994), Warlock Chronicles #6–8, Thor #468–471 (Nov. 1993 – Feb. 1994), Namor The Sub-Mariner #44 (November. 1993), Cloak-and-dagger Defenders #eleven–14 (Jan.–April 1994), Cosmic Powers #ane–6 (March–July 1994), and Catholic Powers Unlimited #1 (May 1995).

Thanos appeared in a connected storyline in Ka-Zar vol. 2, #four–11 (Aug. 1997 – March 1998), Ka-Zar Annual (1997), and the X-Man and Hulk Annual (1998), earlier featuring in Thor vol. 2, #21–25 (March–July 2000) and the 2000 Annual. The character was side by side used in Captain Curiosity vol. 4, #17–19 (June–Aug. 2001), Avengers: Celestial Quest #1–8 (November. 2001 – June 2002), Infinity Completeness #1–6 (Aug.–October. 2002) and Marvel: The Stop #ane–6 (May–Aug 2003).

In 2004 Thanos received an eponymous title that ran for 12 issues. In 2006, the character played an important part in Annihilation: Silver Surfer #1–4 (June – Sept. 2006) and Annihilation #one–6 (Oct. 2006 – March 2007). The character was re-introduced in Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2, #24–25 (April–May 2010) and played a major office in The Thanos Imperative: Ignition (June 2010) and The Thanos Imperative #1–half dozen (July–Dec. 2010).

The character returned in Avengers Assemble #i (March 2012).[3] A mini-series titled Thanos: Son of Titan past Joe Keatinge was planned for publication in Baronial 2012, but was cancelled.[iv]

The character's origin was expanded in the five-issue Thanos Rising miniseries past Jason Aaron and Simone Bianchi which was published monthly beginning in Apr 2013.[v] Afterwards that same year, Thanos played a key role in the Infinity miniseries written by Jonathan Hickman and drawn by Jim Cheung, Jerome Opeña, and Dustin Weaver.

In May 2014, Jim Starlin and Ron Lim worked together on the one-shot Thanos Annual, which is a prelude to a new trilogy of original graphic novels. The beginning, Thanos: The Infinity Revelation, was released the following Baronial.[6] [seven] Offset in February 2015, Starlin also penned a iv-issue miniseries titled Thanos vs. Hulk, which was set prior to the graphic novels. The 2d installment in the trilogy, Thanos: The Infinity Relativity, was released in June, 2015.[eight] The 3rd graphic novel, Thanos: The Infinity Finale, too as the connected mini-series The Infinity Entity were published in 2016.[9]

At the aforementioned time Starlin was writing these graphic novels and tie-ins, the graphic symbol also appeared in New Avengers #23–24 (Oct–Nov 2014),[x] Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 3, #18–20 (Oct–Dec 2014), Legendary Star-Lord #4 (Dec 2014), a vi-issue miniseries titled Thanos: A God Up There Listening (December 2014), Avengers vol. five, #40–41 (Mar–Apr 2015), and Deadpool vol. 3, #45 ("#250") (Jun 2015). Thanos besides played a major role in the five-issue miniseries The Infinity Gauntlet vol. 2, (July 2015 – Jan 2016), a tie-in of the cross-over Secret Wars (2015).

In 2017, as part of Marvel Now!, Thanos received his own solo championship written by Jeff Lemire and drawn by Mike Deodato. After 11 issues Donny Cates and Geoff Shaw took over every bit the creative team. This storyline crossed over with Donny Cates' Cosmic Ghost Passenger storyline.

Fictional graphic symbol biography

Thanos was born on Saturn's moon Titan as the son of Eternals A'lars and Sui-San; his brother is Eros of Titan. Thanos carries the Deviants cistron, and as such, shares the physical appearance of the Eternals' cousin race. Shocked by his appearance and the belief that he would destroy all life in the universe, Sui-San attempted to kill him, but she was stopped by A'lars. During his school years, Thanos was a pacifist[11] and would only play with his blood brother Eros and pets. By adolescence, Thanos had get fascinated with nihilism and entropy, worshipping and somewhen falling in love with the physical apotheosis of Mistress Death.[12] As an adult, Thanos augmented his concrete force and powers through his superior scientific noesis using a combination of mysticism and cybernetic enhancements.[13] He too attempted to create a new life for himself by siring many children equally well as condign a pirate. He finds no fulfillment in either until he is visited again past Mistress Death, for whom he murders his offspring and his pirate captain.[fourteen]

Cosmic Cube and Infinity Gems

Wishing to impress Mistress Death, Thanos gathers an army of villainous aliens and begins a nuclear bombardment of Titan that kills millions of his race.[15] Seeking universal ability in the form of the Cosmic Cube, Thanos travels to Globe. Prior to landing, his vessel destroys a nearby car equally a family witnesses his arrival.[16] Unbeknownst to Thanos, two of the family members in the vehicle survive: the father'south spirit is preserved by the Titanian cosmic entity Kronos and is given a new course as Drax the Destroyer while the daughter is establish by Thanos's begetter, Mentor, and is raised to become the heroine Moondragon. Thanos somewhen locates the Cube, and likewise attracts the attention of Mistress Decease. Willing the Cube to make him omnipotent, Thanos and then discards the Cube. He imprisons Kronos and taunts Kree hero Captain Marvel, who, with the assist of superhero team the Avengers and ISAAC (a super-computer based on Titan), is somewhen able to defeat Thanos past destroying the Cube.[17]

Thanos later comes to the aid of Adam Warlock in a war confronting the Magus and his religious empire. During the process, he ends up adopting Gamora in guild to use her equally his assassin and kill Adam Warlock earlier becoming Magus.[18] [19] During this alliance Thanos cultivates a plan to reunite with Mistress Death, and secretly siphons off the energies of Warlock'south Soul Gem, combining these with the power of the other Infinity Gems to create a weapon capable of destroying a star. Warlock summons the Avengers and Captain Curiosity to stop Thanos, although the plan is foiled when Thanos kills Warlock. The Titan regroups and captures the heroes, who are freed past Spider-Man and the Affair. Thanos is finally stopped past Warlock, whose spirit emerges from the Soul Gem and turns the Titan to rock.[15] [20] Thanos's spirit eventually reappears to back-trail a dying Captain Marvel's soul into the realm of Death.[21]

The Infinity saga

Thanos is somewhen resurrected,[22] and collects the Infinity Gems once again.[23] He uses the gems to create the Infinity Gauntlet, making himself omnipotent, and erases half the living things in the universe to evidence his love to Death.[24] This act and several other acts are soon undone past Nebula and Adam Warlock.[25] Warlock reveals that Thanos has ever allowed himself to be defeated because the Titan secretly knows he is not worthy of ultimate power. Thanos joins Warlock as part of the Infinity Scout and helps him to defeat first his evil[26] and so good[27] personas, and cure Thor of "warrior Madness".[28]

Other adventures

Thanos subsequently recruits a squad of World-bound super-villains and puts them under the field leadership of Geatar in a mission to capture an ancient robot containing the obscure knowledge of a universal library and extract its data.[29] Thanos uses information from the robot to plot against and battle Tyrant, the start cosmos of Galactus turned destroyer.[30] When trapped in an alternate dimension, Thanos employs the aid of the blood brother of Ka-Zar, Parnival Plunder[31] and later the Hulk[32] to escape, although both attempts are unsuccessful. Thanos is eventually freed and comes into conflict with Thor, aligning himself with Mangog in a scheme to obtain powerful mystical and cosmic talismans which will allow him to destroy all life in the universe,[33] and during their battles Thanos decimates the planet Rigel-3.[34]

Thanos then uses the heroes Thor and Genis-Vell (Captain Marvel's son) against the death god Walker, who attempts to woo Mistress Death and then destroy the entity subsequently existence rejected.[35] Thanos then devises a plan to become the All-Father of a new pantheon of gods created by himself. Thanos, however, finds himself opposed by the Avengers' former fellow member Mantis and her son Quoi, who apparently is destined to exist the Celestial Messiah. Thanos abandons this program after having to unite with Mistress Death to destroy the "Rot", a cosmic abnormality in deep space caused by Thanos's incessant love for Death.[36] Thanos also once conducted extensive enquiry on genetics, studying many of the universe's heroes and villains before cloning them, and gene-spliced his own DNA into the subjects. Although he later abandons the project, 5 clones survive, beingness versions of Professor X, Iron Man, Gladiator, Dr. Strange, and Galactus respectively. A sixth and unnamed version of Thanos also appears, and it is revealed the incarnations of Thanos encountered in the past by Thor and Ka-Zar were actually clones. The true Thanos – with the aid of Adam Warlock, Gamora, Pip the Troll, Spider-Man, Captain Curiosity, and Dr. Strange – destroys the remaining clones.[37]

When the aboriginal Egyptian pharaoh Akhenaten uses a source of cosmic ability, the Center of the Universe, to seize power in nowadays-twenty-four hour period Earth (killing nigh of Earth'south heroes in the process), Thanos uses a time-travel stratagem to defeat him. Thanos then uses the Heart of the Universe to reverse Akhenaten's actions and was likewise compelled to correct a flaw in the universe, for which Mistress Decease kisses him, and speaks to him for the first time. Changed by the experience, Thanos advises confidant Adam Warlock he will no longer seek universal conquest.[38]

Thanos decides to absolve for the destruction of Rigel-3, and agrees to aid a colony of Rigellians in evacuating their planet before Galactus can swallow it. During the grade of this mission Thanos learns Galactus is collecting the Infinity Gems in an attempt to end his unyielding hunger. Thanos later learns Galactus is beingness manipulated into releasing a multiversal threat called Hunger, which feeds on entire universes. Despite opposition from Thanos, Galactus unwittingly frees the entity, and when its intentions are revealed, the pair team up and attempt to destroy it.[39]

En road to the Kyln, an intergalactic prison, Thanos meets Death for the commencement time since re-edifice existence with the Heart of the Universe. Death claims to exist worth wooing, merely says Thanos must offer something other than expiry. At the Kyln Thanos encounters Peter Quill, who has retired himself from the role of Star-Lord, and the Strontian warrior Gladiator of the Shi'ar Empire, who are both prisoners, also as the Beyonder, who has been rendered amnesiac past its choice to assume a humanoid female form. Thanos battles the Beyonder, causing its heed to close downward and leaving its power trapped within a asleep physical form. Thanos then instructs the Kyln officers to keep the Beyonder on life support indefinitely in order to prevent the entity from existence reborn.[xl] The destruction frees Thanos and his fellow inmates, and he finds himself accompanied past the chaos-mite Skreet in his plans to get out the remains of the prison. He discovers, nevertheless, that the destruction wrought by the battle with the Beyonder has freed the final prisoner brought in by Peter Quill before he gave upwardly the championship of Star-Lord: the Fallen 1, revealed to be the truthful first Herald of Galactus, who had been held in a container deep in the Kyln. Thanos defeats the former Herald and places him under complete mental control.[41] He later on appears in Wisconsin attempting to charge a weapon called the Pyramatrix with the life strength of everyone on Earth until he is defeated by Squirrel Girl. Afterward the boxing, Uatu the Watcher appears and confirms to Squirrel Girl that she defeated the real Thanos, not a clone or copy.[42]

Anything

During the Annihilation War Thanos allies himself with the genocidal villain Annihilus. When the Annihilation Wave destroys the Kyln, Thanos sends the Fallen to check on the status of the Beyonder, whose mortal grade he finds has perished. Before the Fallen tin study back to Thanos it encounters Tenebrous and Aegis: two of Galactus's ancient foes. Thanos convinces Tenebrous and Aegis to join the Anything Wave in gild to become revenge on Galactus, and they subsequently defeat the World Devourer and the Silvery Surfer. Annihilus desires the secret of the Power Catholic and asks Thanos to study Galactus. Once Thanos learns Annihilus's true goal is to use the Power Cosmic to destroy all life and remain the sole survivor, he decides to free Galactus. Drax the Destroyer kills Thanos before he can do so merely discovers that Thanos had placed a failsafe device to allow Silverish Surfer to costless Galactus in the event that Annihilus betrayed him.[43] During a climactic battle with Annihilus, Nova is nearly expiry and sees Thanos continuing with Mistress Death.[44]

The Thanos Imperative

A cocoon protected by the Universal Church of Truth is revealed to be hiding Thanos, who has been called by Oblivion to be the new Avatar of Death.[45] Resurrected earlier his listen could exist fully formed, Thanos goes on a mindless binge before being captured past the Guardians of the Milky way.[46] Thanos pretends to aid the Guardians against the invading Cancerverse, and after discovering its origin kills an alternating version of Mar-Vell, the self-proclaimed Avatar of Life. This causes the collapse of the Cancerverse, and Nova sacrifices himself in an attempt to incorporate Thanos inside the imploding reality.[47] Thanos escapes[48] and returns to Earth seeking an artificial cosmic cube. He forms an incarnation of the criminal grouping Zodiac to remember it, but he is defeated by the Avengers and the Guardians of the Galaxy and remanded to the custody of the Elders of the Universe.[49]

Infinity

Thanos soon invades World once more after being informed that well-nigh of the Avengers accept temporarily left the planet.[fifty] He launches an assail on Attilan, which he offers to spare in exchange for the deaths of all Inhumans between the ages of 16 and 22. Black Bolt subsequently informs the Illuminati that the true purpose of the invasion is to find and kill Thane, an Eternal/Inhuman hybrid that Thanos had secretly fathered years earlier.[51] Thanos is trapped in a pocket limbo of stasis by his son.[52] Thanos is freed past Namor and was among the villains that joined his Cabal to destroy other worlds.[53] Thanos later meets his end on Battleworld, where he is easily killed past God Emperor Doom during an attempted insurrection.[54]

The Infinity Conflict

Investigating a temporal anomaly on Titan, Thanos finds Pip the Troll and an older Eros who has come from the hereafter. Eros tells him about an enemy fabricated out darkness that will destroy Thanos in the future. Eros and Thanos craft a plan, but when they become to implement information technology Thanos is confronted by his futurity self who tells him to modify the plan to ensure his safe. The future Thanos and then takes command of the past Thanos' body.[55]

Nether the control of his future cocky Thanos began searching through ancient temples and sites to find something that would allow him to eventually become like his hereafter. Through his journey he was also forced to kill Adam Warlock who might interfere with his future'due south programme. Afterwards existence unable to locate Eros, his future cocky tells Thanos that Eros was extremely important to his catholic masterwork. And then after locating an moving comet Thanos goes to the comet which independent a treasure more than powerful than the Infinity Gems. Despite the speed of comet beingness plenty to immediately vaporize any being Thanos was able to get it since he "existed outside the norm". With this artifact Thanos was able to absorb every cosmic being that exists in his universe, eventually facing Eternity and Infinity. Despite their all-time effort Thanos defeats them and absorbs the 2 beings. He and so merges with his future self finally taking the battle to the Living Tribunal and the One To a higher place All.[56]

Facing the One Above All and the Living Tribunal, Thanos' futurity self went on to absorb both of them becoming the entirety of the Multiverse. As the multiverse began dying, while his future self searched for Eros, present Thanos was locked away inside his future's psyche not allowed to interfere. In a desperate ditch effort to forestall all of this Eros, alongside Pip, travel to different points of Thanos' past and tell him he is not alone and that he is loved. Withal, it is all in vain as Thanos simply didn't care, but these temporal paradoxes did permit present Thanos to use that fiddling access of his time to come's ability to talk to Eros through his past selves. He directs Eros and Pip to his futurity's psyche and had Eros free him, simply unfortunately this allows future Thanos to finally detect Eros and had him absorbed within his universe. And then Adam Warlock came and refuses to complimentary Thanos considering he would end up as Eros and tells Thanos that trust would be the only affair that would stop hereafter Thanos. As his future cocky saw that being was just a never-endless cycle which trapped all beings decided to commit suicide and "gratis" everyone from this "torture". Thankfully, Kang prevented Eros from going to talk to Thanos' past selves which allowed him to avert capture. This caused time to come Thanos to get distracted which immune present Thanos to take command and reset everything prior to his future machinations, while erasing his future in the process.[57]

Ultimates and Civil War II

Thanos is unintentionally brought back to the universe past Galactus.[58] When Thanos prepares to raid a Projection Pegasus facility to steal a Cosmic Cube, he is ambushed and defeated by a team of Avengers. During their battle, he mortally wounds Armed forces and critically injures She-Blob.[59] [lx] [61] Subsequently his defeat, he is imprisoned in the Triskelion,[62] and manipulates Anti-Man into facilitating his escape.[63] Thanos goes on a killing spree, but Black Panther, Blueish Marvel and Monica Rambeau are able to cease him past devising a device that blocks the electric synapses in his brain.[64]

Thanos Returns

Thanos somehow later recovers and escapes captivity, and reclaims his Black Social club forces from Corvus Glaive. Later retaking command of his Black Quadrant outpost, Thanos discovers that he is dying.[65] Thanos tries to force his father, Mentor, to find a cure for his malady, only kills him when he is unable to.[66] Presently after Thanos would be battered and detained by the Shi'ar Regal Baby-sit after he invaded the very planet station of his father's facility sitting in their territory.[67] A quick spring into the hereafter shows Thanos'south estranged son Thane having bested his mad father with the personification of expiry at his side.[68]

Presently locked within a maximum security catholic Alcatraz, Thanos sits lone inside a prison cell equally his sickness ravages his trunk. All while beingness mocked by its prison house warden whom he lured into a false sense of security in order to escape; ripping off his arm for escape admission and murdering one-half his personal staff in a bid for freedom.[69] Having narrowly escaped his imprisonment before its cocky-devastation, Thanos retreats to a hidden outpost where a roving mercenary colony loyal only to him was once stationed. But to discover information technology decimated at the paw of the new lover of Mistress Death; who reveals that she'd stricken her former avatar with his fatal sickness, being his son Thane, now boasting the power of the Phoenix Force. Whom under her coaxing, had banished the mad titan back to the decimated Moon of Titan now entirely stripped of his godlike powers.[lxx]

For the next few months, Thanos would survive alone and all merely powerless in the ruins of his dwelling city. Surviving off the mankind of mutated vermin and beingness accosted past local scavengers who preyed upon him in his weakened condition, he is shortly picked up by the unlikely crew of Thane's betrayed cohorts Tryco Slatterus, his adopted daughter Nebula and his brother Eros of Titan.[71] Having heard of their plight, the three were dismayed to find Thanos stripped of all he was and had ever been; his 2d daughter only like-minded to come along so she could kill her father, immediately assaulted him.[ book & effect needed ]

Starfox was able to preempt her attempt at patricide while inviting his wayward tyrant of a blood brother aboard their vessel. Thanos mentioned the only fashion for him to be relieved of his mortality was to seek out the God Quarry heralded by The Witches of Infinity. Starfox initially wrote this off every bit fable and folklore. Now on the path to the cosmic coven set at the edge of the known universe, Thanos and crew cease short of a black hole, knowing total well that it is where the witches make their abode. The Mad Titan jumps into the pinhole of nothingness aslope his brother, whom not trusting his butcherous sibling with the supposed infinite power of said commonage; having survived the crushing force of the singularity they dove into, Thanos and Eros are greeted by the Coven at the godly graveyard.[72]

Thanos demands the three that are ane to render his godhood to him. Starfox tries his best to amuse the enchantresses simply to be rebuked past them, much to Thanos'southward joy when they prematurely aged him. Seeing as it was neither their identify to destroy nor turn away those seeking them, The Witches profess the only way for the warlord to be made whole over again was to climb downwards into the God Quarry and await a trial that would test his soul. Immediately after setting foot within the graveyard of old gods, Thanos is subsumed into the bedrock within which they balance.[73]

As his journey of the cadre being commenced, Thanos'due south trial began with him equally leader of earth and the universes greatest champions, the Avengers. Just he'south unable to escape the nagging feeling he's forgotten something, till the quarry itself wearing the guise of Falcon reminds him of who he used to be; tempting him to live as a hero and a man at peace for the first time in his immortal life. Simply Thanos laughs maniacally as he coldly rebukes such a path, ruthlessly killing his would exist friends and allies while choosing to remain whom he always was. His cosmic might returned to him, Thanos is freed from the God Quarry, wherein he immediately accosts his brother Eros and threatens the coven to release him from their domain then that he might practice abroad with Thane one time and for all.[74]

The Unworthy Thor

Around the fourth dimension of the New Thor's appearance, Thanos is approached past a mysterious hooded woman, who proposes an alliance. He tasks her with bringing him the hammer of the deceased Ultimate Thor.[75] The woman fails, but removes her disguise to reveal herself as Hela, the Norse goddess of expiry. She tells Thanos that she needs his help to reclaim Hel, and in exchange, offers to give him the one thing he has been searching for his entire life: death. After this, the two buss.[76]

Thanos Wins

Some time afterward his boxing with Thane, Thanos travels to the Chitauri homeworld. All the same, upon subjugating the planet, he is attacked past a being identified only as The Rider, who captures Thanos and uses a slice of the fractured Time Rock to bring Thanos millions of years into the future, where he encounters an elderly version of himself who has destroyed almost all life in the universe.[77] At first, Thanos believes it to be some sort of fob, only is convinced once the future Thanos utters the proper name Dione, which Thanos's mother had planned to proper name him before she went insane.[78] Rex Thanos reveals he needs his younger self'southward assistance to defeat the Fallen Ane, the last being left in the Universe, and so that he may finally reunite with Death.[79] The Fallen One soon arrives, revealed to be a darkened Silver Surfer armed with the hordes of Annihilus and the deceased Thor's Mjolnir, using the latter to swiftly kill the Rider. The Surfer is distracted past the feral Hulk that Thanos kept chained in his basement, allowing the two Thanos to kill him using Surtur'southward Twilight Sword.[fourscore] Upon the Surfer's death, Death arrives, and Thanos realizes the true reason that King Thanos brought him into the time to come: then that King Thanos can finally die, reasoning that if he must dice, information technology tin only be at the hands of himself. At first, Thanos is more than than happy to oblige his time to come analogue'southward request, but quickly stops, disappointed at how pathetic and submissive his older self has become. Resolving to never become as pathetic and complacent every bit Rex Thanos has go, Thanos uses the fragment of the Fourth dimension Rock and the Power Cosmic left in the Surfer's corpse to render to the present solar day. Every bit the time to come begins to crumble around him, King Thanos realizes that his younger self has taken the steps necessary to ensure that this timeline will never take identify. Equally he fades into nothingness, Rex Thanos asks Death what his younger self did, to which she simply responds "he won."[81]

Infinity Wars

During the "Infinity Wars" storyline, Thanos afterward discovers that the Infinity Stones are being collected in one case again and begins plotting to reassemble his gauntlet. However, he is assaulted by Requiem, whom he plain recognizes, and is quickly killed. She and then destroys the Infinity Gauntlet and also commands the Chitauri loyal to Thanos to die.[82]

Powers and abilities

Thanos is a mutant fellow member of the race of superhumans known as the Titanian Eternals. The character possesses abilities common to the Eternals, but amplified to a higher degree through a combination of his mutant–Eternal heritage, bionic amplification, mysticism, and power bestowed by the abstract entity, Death. Demonstrating enormous superhuman strength, speed, stamina, immortality and invulnerability among other qualities, Thanos tin can absorb and projection vast quantities of catholic free energy, and is capable of telekinesis and telepathy. He can dispense matter and live indefinitely without food, air or h2o, cannot die of old age, is immune to all terrestrial diseases, and has loftier resistance to psychic assaults. Thanos is likewise an accomplished hand-to-hand combatant, having been trained in the art of war on Titan.[ citation needed ]

Thanos has proven himself capable of briefly holding his own in boxing against Odin,[83] and of diggings Galactus off his feet.[84]

Thanos is a supergenius in virtually all known fields of advanced scientific discipline and has created technology far exceeding that which is found on contemporary World. He often employs a transportation chair capable of infinite flight, strength field projection, teleportation, time travel, and movement through alternating universes. Thanos is also a main strategist and uses several space vessels, at least three under the name "Sanctuary", every bit a base of operations.

Other versions

  • In the 1996 Constructing Comics books published jointly by DC Comics and Marvel, Thanos was merged with Darkseid to get "Thanoseid".[85]
  • In the alternate universe limited series Earth X, Thanos dwells in the Realm of the Expressionless with the entity Death.[86] Additionally, this version's mother was a Skrull, which Expiry used in combination with her own secret to make him believe that she was his mother. When the deception is revealed, he uses the Ultimate Nullifier on Expiry.[87]
  • The Ultimate Curiosity banner title Ultimate Fantastic Four features an alternate universe version of Thanos who is the ruler of Acheron and has a son called Ronan the Accuser who is in possession of a Catholic Cube[88]), a vast empire consisting of thousands of worlds on another aeroplane of being.[89]
  • Thanos features in the express series Marvel Zombies two, set in the alternate universe of Earth-2149. Having been "zombified" and recruited into the cosmically powered Galacti, the character is killed by a cosmic-powered Hulk later on an altercation over nutrient.[90]
  • In an alternate reality depicted in the "Heroes Reborn" miniseries, Thanos places the Infinity Gems in Infinity Rings and fights Md Spectrum.[91] [92]

In other media

Television

  • Thanos appears in the Silver Surfer animated series, voiced by Gary Krawford. Due to Fox's circulate standards, this version is depicted as a worshiper of Lady Chaos.[93]
  • Thanos appears in The Super Hero Squad Bear witness animated series, voiced by Steve Blum in his start appearance,[94] and by Jim Cummings in all subsequent appearances.[95]
  • Thanos appears in the Avengers Assemble [96] and Guardians of the Galaxy animated series, voiced past Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[95]
  • Thanos appears in the animated special Lego Marvel Super Heroes - Guardians of the Milky way: The Thanos Threat, voiced over again by Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[ citation needed ]
  • Thanos appears in the animated special Lego Marvel Super Heroes - Black Panther: Trouble in Wakanda, voiced again past Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[95] [97] After being beaten by the Avengers, Thanos collaborates with Erik Killmonger and Ulysses Klaue to raid Wakanda for its Vibranium so he can become stronger.

Curiosity Cinematic Universe

Thanos appears in the first 3 phases of the Curiosity Cinematic Universe's films, known collectively as the "Infinity Saga", primarily portrayed by Josh Brolin via movement capture.[98] [99] Alternate timeline versions of Thanos also appear in the Disney+ animated serial, What If...?, with Brolin reprising the voice function.[100]

Video games

  • Thanos appeared as a playable graphic symbol in the Capcom fighting games Curiosity Super Heroes [101] and Marvel vs. Capcom 2, voiced by Andrew Jackson.[95]
  • Thanos appears equally the final dominate in Capcom's Marvel Super Heroes In State of war of the Gems.
  • Thanos appears as a DLC character in Lego Marvel Super Heroes.[102]
  • Thanos appears as a playable grapheme of Lego Marvel'southward Avengers, voiced again by Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[95]
  • Thanos appears as a playable character in Marvel Time to come Fight.[103]
  • Thanos appears as a playable grapheme in Marvel: Contest of Champions.[104]
  • Three incarnations of Thanos appear as playable characters in the lucifer-iii mobile game Marvel Puzzle Quest. The beginning two, based on the comics ("Modernistic" and "The Mad Titan"), were added to the game in December 2016,[105] while a third inspired past the MCU incarnation ("Endgame") was added in Apr 2019.[106]
  • Thanos appears in Guardians of the Milky way: The Telltale Serial, voiced by Jake Hart.[95] This version seeks an ancient artifact called the Eternity Forge, only is killed in boxing past the Guardians of the Galaxy.
  • Thanos appears as a playable character in Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite,[107] voiced again past Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[95] He is captured past Ultron Sigma until he is rescued past an alliance of heroes from the Marvel and Capcom universes and aids them in devising a program to gainsay Ultron Sigma.
  • The MCU incarnation of Thanos appeared in Fortnite Battle Royale equally role of Marvel-sponsored Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame necktie-in events, voiced by archive footage of Josh Brolin. [108] Thanos also appears as a "peel" in the game.[109]
  • The MCU incarnation of Thanos appears in Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2.[110]
  • The MCU incarnation of Thanos appears as a boss in the Spider-Man Unlimited Infinity War tie-in update, voiced by Kyle Hebert.[111] [112]
  • Thanos appears in Marvel Powers United VR, voiced again by Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[95]
  • Thanos appears in Curiosity Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Gild, voiced again by Isaac C. Singleton Jr.[95]
  • Thanos appears as a playable character in Marvel Strike Forcefulness.[113]

Novels

  • Thanos appears in the 2017 novel, Thanos: Death Sentence by Stuart Moore.[114] The volume follows Thanos' last chance to win Death's love afterwards his defeat at the end of The Infinity Gauntlet.
  • Thanos appears in the 2018 novel, Thanos: Titan Consumed, by Barry Lyga.[ citation needed ]

Nerveless editions

A number of the stories featuring Thanos take been republished into trade paperbacks and other nerveless editions:

  • The Life of Helm Marvel (collects Iron Homo #55, Helm Marvel #25–34, Marvel Feature #12), 1991, ISBN 0-87135-635-X
  • Essential Avengers: Volume 6 (includes Helm Curiosity #33; The Avengers #125, 135), 576 pages, February 2008, ISBN 0-7851-3058-half dozen
  • The Greatest Battles of the Avengers (includes Avengers Annual #vii), 156 pages, December 1993, ISBN 0-87135-981-ii
  • Avengers vs. Thanos (collects Fe-Man #55, Captain Marvel #25–33, Marvel Feature #12, Daredevil #105–107, Avengers #125, Warlock #nine-11, fifteen, Avengers Almanac #seven, Marvel Two-In-Ane Annual #2, and material from Logan'south Run #6), 472 pages, March 2013, ISBN 0-7851-6850-viii
  • Essential Curiosity Two-in-One: Volume ii (includes Marvel Two-in-Ane Annual #2), 568 pages, July 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2698-8
  • Marvel Masterworks Captain Marvel: Book 3 (collects Helm Marvel #22–33, Fe Human being #55), 288 pages, hardcover, April 2008, ISBN 0-7851-3015-2
  • Marvel Masterworks Captain Curiosity: Book 6 (collects Captain Marvel #58–62, Marvel Spotlight #1–4, eight, Marvel Super-Heroes #3, Marvel Graphic Novel #1; Logan's Run #63), 296 pages, hardcover, May 2016, ISBN 978-0785199946
  • Curiosity Masterworks Warlock: Book 2 (collects Strange Tales #178–181; Warlock #9–xv; Avengers Annual #7; Curiosity 2-in-One Annual #2), hardcover, 320 pages, hardcover, June 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3511-1
  • The Death of Captain Marvel (collects Captain Marvel #34, Marvel Spotlight #one–two, Marvel Graphic Novel #1), 128 pages, hardcover, June 2010, ISBN 0-7851-4627-10
  • Silverish Surfer: Rebirth of Thanos (collects Silver Surfer #34-38 and Yule Memory from Marvel Vacation Special 1992 by Jim Starlin, Ron Lim, Terry Austin), 128 pages, April 1993, ISBN 0-87135-968-5
  • The Thanos Quest:
    • Volume 1 (The Thanos Quest miniseries #ane-3, 1990-1991 (caution, later on printings of this edition have poor quality) ISBN 0-87135-681-iii
    • Volume 2 (The Thanos Quest miniseries #4-6, 1990-1991 (circumspection, after printings of this edition accept poor quality) ISBN 0-87135-682-1
  • Silver Surfer: Rebirth of Thanos (collects Silverish Surfer #34–38; The Thanos Quest miniseries; "The Final Flower!" from Logan'due south Run #six), 224 pages, April 2006, ISBN 0-7851-2046-7 (hardcover, August 2010, ISBN 0-7851-4478-1)
  • The Infinity Gauntlet (collects The Infinity Gauntlet limited series), 256 pages, March 2000, ISBN 0-87135-944-8 (December 2004, ISBN 0-7851-0892-0; July 2006, ISBN 0-7851-2349-0; hardcover, Baronial 2010, ISBN 0-7851-4549-four)
  • Infinity War (collects Infinity War limited series; Warlock and the Infinity Watch #7–x; Marvel Comics Presents #108–111), 400 pages, Apr 2006, ISBN 0-7851-2105-6
  • Infinity Crusade:
    • Volume i (collects Infinity Crusade #1–3, Warlock Chronicles #1–3, Warlock and the Infinity Watch #18–19), 248 pages, Dec 2008, ISBN 0-7851-3127-2
    • Volume 2 (collects Infinity Cause #4–6, Warlock Chronicles #four–5, Warlock and the Infinity Watch #twenty–22), 248 pages, February 2009, ISBN 0-7851-3128-0
  • Thor: Blood and Thunder (collects Thor #468–471, Silver Surfer #86–88, Warlock Chronicles #6–8, Warlock and the Infinity Watch #23–25), 336 pages, July 2011, ISBN 978-0-7851-5094-7
  • DC versus Marvel Comics (collects DC vs. Marvel mini-series, Doctor Strangefate #1), 163 pages, September 1996, ISBN 1-56389-294-four
  • Ka-Zar by Mark Waid and Andy Kubert:
    • Volume 1 (collects Ka-Zar #1–seven, Tales of the Marvel Universe #1), 208 pages, January 2011, ISBN 978-0-7851-4353-six
    • Volume 2 (collects Ka-Zar #eight–14, Almanac '97), 216 pages, March 2011, ISBN 978-0-7851-5992-6
  • Deadpool Archetype: Book 5 (collects Deadpool #26–33, Babe's First Deadpool, Deadpool Team-Up #1), 272 pages, June 2011, ISBN 978-0-7851-5519-5
  • The Mighty Thor past Dan Jurgens and John Romita Jr.: Volume four (collects Thor vol. 2, #18–25, Annual 2000), 256 pages, Nov 2010, ISBN 978-0-7851-4927-9
  • Infinity Abyss (collects Infinity Abyss limited series), 176 pages, 2003, ISBN 0-7851-0985-4
  • Thanos: The End (collects Marvel: The Finish limited series), 160 pages, May 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1116-half-dozen
  • Thanos: Redemption (collects Thanos #1–12), 304 pages, November 2013, ISBN 0-7851-8506-2
    • Epiphany (collects Thanos Vol. 1 #1–6), 144 pages, June 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1355-X
    • Samaritan (collects Thanos Vol. 1 #7–12), 144 pages, October 2004, ISBN 0-7851-1540-4
  • Annihilation:
    • Book 1 (collects Drax the Destroyer miniseries, Annihilation: Prologue one-shot, Anything: Nova miniseries), 256 pages, October 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2901-4 (hardcover, March 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2511-6)
    • Book 2 (collects Annihilation: Ronan miniseries, Annihilation: Silver Surfer miniseries, Annihilation: Super-Skrull miniseries), 320 pages, November 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2902-2 (hardcover, May 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2512-4)
    • Volume 3 (collects Anything: The Nova Corps Files one-shot/handbook, Annihilation limited series, Annihilation: Heralds of Galactus miniseries), 304 pages, December 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2903-0 (hardcover, July 2007, ISBN 0-7851-2513-ii)
  • The Thanos Imperative (collects The Thanos Imperative #1–half dozen, The Thanos Imperative: Ignition, The Thanos Imperative: Destruction, Thanos Sourcebook), 248 pages, hardcover, February 2011, ISBN 0-7851-5183-four
  • Infinity (collects Infinity #ane–6, New Avengers vol. 3, #7–12, Avengers vol 5, #xiv–23, Infinity: Against the Tide Infinite Comic #ane–ii), 632 pages, hardcover, February 2014, ISBN 978-0785184225
  • Thanos Rising (collects Thanos Ascent #1–5), 136 pages, hardcover, July 2014, ISBN 978-0785190479
  • Thanos: A God Upwards There Listening (collects Thanos: A God Up There Listening #1–4 and Thanos Annual #one), 120 pages, hardcover, December 2014, ISBN 978-0785191582
  • Thanos vs. Hulk (collects Thanos vs. Hulk #1–4, Warlock (1972) #12), 112 pages, June 2015, ISBN 978-0785197126
  • Thanos: Cosmic Powers (collects Secret Defenders #12–14, Cosmic Powers #i–6), 344 pages, November 2015, ISBN 978-0785198178
  • Deadpool vs. Thanos (collects Deadpool vs. Thanos #one–4), 112 pages, December 2015, ISBN 978-0785198451
  • The Infinity Gauntlet: Warzones! (collects The Infinity Gauntlet #1–5), 112 pages, December 2015, ISBN 978-0785198741
  • Siege: Battleworld (collects Siege #1–four, Uncanny X-Men (2011) #9–10), 144 pages, February 2016, ISBN 978-0785195498
  • Secret Wars (collects Secret Wars #one–9 and material from Secret Wars #0 FCBD), 312 pages, March 2016, ISBN 978-0785198840
  • The Infinity Entity (collects: The Infinity Entity #1–iv, Thanos Almanac #1), 116 pages, July 2016, ISBN 978-0785194217'
  • Thanos The Infinity Revelation, Jim Starlin, 2014, ISBN 978-0785184706
  • Thanos The Infinity Relativity, Jim Starlin, 2015, ISBN 978-0785193036
  • Thanos The Infinity Finale, Jim Starlin, 2016, ISBN 978-0785193050
  • Thanos returns (collects Thanos Vol 2 #one-5), 136 pages, by Jeff Lemire, 2017 ISBN 978-1302905576
  • Thanos Vol. two: The God Quarry (collects Thanos Vol 2 #vii-11), Jeff Lemire 2018, ISBN 978-1302905583
  • Thanos Wins (collects THANOS Vol 2 #13-18, THANOS ANNUAL 1), Donny Cates 2018, ISBN 978-1302905590

Reception

Thanos was ranked number 47 on IGN'south height 100 comic book villains of all fourth dimension[115] and number 21 on Complex 'southward 25 Greatest Comic Book Villains Listing.[116]

The Reddit forum /r/ThanosDidNothingWrong, dedicated to sharing theories and memes nigh the character, went viral in July 2018 when it was announced that half of the forum'southward subscribers would be banned, mirroring Thanos' plan to eradicate half of all life in the universe. The number of subscribers rose from 100,000 users in June, to over 700,000 on July 9, leading to over 350,000 users being banned, the largest such banning in Reddit'south history.[117] [118] [119]

A May 2019 Forbes column posited that "Thanos did nothing wrong" has get a pop internet meme, and that the film Endgame provides some prove in favor of this view, in particular when Helm America says, "I saw a pod of whales when I was coming over the bridge . . . There's fewer ships, cleaner water." The author notes that given the contemporary extinction crunch driven by human actions, "you lot could indeed argue that Thanos did nothing incorrect -- and in the long run, the villain might have actually saved the earth."[120]

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External links

  • Thanos at the Marvel Universe wiki
  • Thanos at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • Thanos at the Marvel Directory
  • Thanos_(Globe-616) on Curiosity Database, a Curiosity Comics wiki
  • Thanos at Curiosity Cinematic Universe Wiki

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanos

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