Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Characters / MarvelComicsCosmicEntities

Go To

1[[foldercontrol]]
2
3!!Supreme Entities
4
5[[folder:The One Above All]]
6!!The One Above All
7[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_one_above_all.png]]
8[[caption-width-right:350:"What you see is what I am to you. Don't worry. It's a compliment, not an insult. That's what my creations do. They find the humanity in God."]]
9->''"I see through many eyes. I build with many hands. They are themselves, but they are also me. I am all-powerful. My only weapon is love. The mystery intrigues me."''
10In a series with many cosmic beings, there has to be one who is supreme. And that being is the One Above All. Marvel's mightiest character is one who appears rather rarely, showing up in only 16 issues in total, and only for a few pages. A good deal of knowledge about him comes from what is told to us by characters. Shrouded in mystery, the One Above All watches all the events of the Marvel Multiverse unfold and occasionally interacts with heroes like the Fantastic Four and Spider-Man.
11----
12* AllLovingHero: Well, his only weapon ''is'' love. Heck, when Nightmare died in the final issue of ''ComicBook/{{Loki}}'' and went to Heaven (as part of his scheme, he had been turned into a mortal that had technically led a sinless life), the One Above All welcomed even him with open arms, saying "Bask in my love for all eternity".
13* AllPowerfulBystander: THE all-powerful bystander. When he interacts with beings, it is usually to heal them (either physically or emotionally) or to assist heroes in ways only an extraordinarily powerful entity could, if they need help. His bystander nature is justified since his ''only'' weapon is love.
14* AlternateCompanyEquivalent: While on paper his DC equivalent would be The Presence, as an AuthorAvatar for Marvel creators, he would probably be closer to The Writer from Grant Morrison's ''ComicBook/AnimalMan''.
15* AlwaysSomeoneBetter: Thor hints at this concept when describing a being greater than the Living Tribunal (the One Above All being the only qualifier at that time). The trope dies with the One Above All, however, who is indisputably the mightiest and highest entity in the setting.
16* AmbiguouslyRelated: The more traditional Yahweh does exist in this setting, being (unsurprisingly) involved with ''ComicBook/GhostRider'''s lore and a satirical appearance in ''ComicBook/HowardTheDuck'' [[Creator/MarvelMAX MAX]] of all places. It's unclear how they tie into one another, if at all. There's also the Fulcrum from ''ComicBook/Eternals2008'', who is the creator of the cosmic system the Celestials maintain, is described as omnipotent, and also takes the appearance of Jack Kirby, leading fans to speculate he's related to the One Above All, but thanks to ChuckCunninghamSyndrome, we don't have an answer.
17* AngelUnaware: This seems to be a running gag with the One Above All. No one knows just who he is until he makes it clear, [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/2/27967/678265-bill_and_toaa_2.jpg even Beta Ray Bill]].
18* AuthorAvatar: One of the more widely accepted explanations of the One, possibly spawned by a famous appearance where he looked like Creator/JackKirby, that he is the in-universe representation of the creative teams and/or Marvel editorial.
19* CompleteImmortality: Age is meaningless and no one can harm him. Except someone using an Astral Regulator like Thanos in ''Thanos: The Infinity Conflict'', but that was a very unique case.
20* CosmicEntity: He can fool anyone into thinking he is a regular human but he is far more on the inside.
21* CrisisOfFaith: Spider-Man has one and demands that "God" answer his questions. The One Above All later converses with Peter and Peter's faith in all things (but especially humanity) is restored.
22* DeadpanSnarker: Yes, he has his moments.
23-->'''[=TOAA=]''': ''(after Peter has taken out his frustrations on a dumpster)'' Congratulations. That dumpster'll never menace anyone ever again.
24* DontFearTheReaper: He tells Spider-Man to not fear death or mourn Aunt May should she pass.
25* EmpathicHealer: He healed ComicBook/BetaRayBill of his injuries. He also heals Peter of the hand injuries caused by Peter repeatedly punching a dumpster.
26* EvilTwin: In the form of [[TheAntiGod The One Below All]], introduced in ''Immortal Hulk''. [[spoiler: More specifically, they're two sides of the same coin. The One Below All is The One Above All's "Hulk".]]
27* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: Marvel's prime example. Stronger than ComicBook/{{Thanos}} with the Infinity Gauntlet, the Beyonder and the Living Tribunal and wiser than any Celestial, God, or Abstract.
28* ExpectingSomeoneTaller: When the ComicBook/FantasticFour meet the One, Sue Richards was more than a little surprised that she was taller than God.
29-->'''Sue:''' ...Reed, why I am taller than the Almighty?
30* EvenMoreOmnipotent: Is 99.99% of the time the "Even More" part, but it's briefly implied in ''Thanos: The Infinity Conflict'' and [[spoiler:''ComicBook/DefendersBeyond'']] that even he has superiors.
31* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: He once took the form of a homeless man to speak with Spider-Man. When Jackie [=McGee=] sees him, she sees the face of her mother.
32* GodIsGood: Between consoling Spider-Man and restoring his faith in humanity, bringing Thing back to life and giving Beta Ray Bill hope for him and his people, The One Above All is a pretty swell guy.
33* GoldColoredSuperiority: Often appears in a golden humanoid form, and is, well, above all.
34* GreaterScopeParagon: The One Above All and [[GuardianOfTheMultiverse the Living Tribunal]] are the main architects of balance and order in the ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse''. However, they usually operate InMysteriousWays and seldom involve themselves in events without something being so screwed up that only their power can fix it. They are also not above doing things like destroying an entire universe if it's the most efficient means of solving the problem.
35* {{Heaven}}: The One Above All has been seen residing in Heaven.
36* HopeBringer: He is this to Beta Ray Bill.
37--> "All is not lost. Where there is life... there is hope."
38* IKnowYourTrueName: This is how he got Spider-Man's attention when they first met.
39* InMysteriousWays: At the end of ''Immortal Hulk'', Hulk tries to get some answers from him about why his life is so horrible. The One Above All doesn't respond in a way Hulk can comprehend. Joe Fixit, meanwhile, just decides he's not ''going'' to give them a straight answer, and so decides "screw you!" Which it is then implied was the big guy's plan all along. And why didn't he intervene at any point when the Beyonders were destroying the Multiverse, up to and including killing the Living Tribunal? Who knows?
40* MediumAwareness: [[spoiler:His appearance in ''ComicBook/DefendersBeyond'' has him mention "the storyteller" and his conversation with Blue Marvel implies that while he's the highest being the ''characters'' can ever reach, he's still below the writers of Marvel Comics, a fact he is aware of.]]
41* MusclesAreMeaningless: Would you believe [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/2/27967/675920-the_homeless_god_13.jpg the man on the left]], who is smaller and scrawnier than Spider-Man (on the right), is far stronger than guys like Hulk and Thor?
42* MysteriousPast: He is the Creator of all Marvel universes and it is explicitly their God but, aside from his earliest appearances, Marvel doesn't seem to want The One Above All with an identity identifiable with real world religions, his mysterious nature could be linked to several monotheistic gods with a benign nature and interest in love; in contrast Creator/DCComics who has always been clear The Presence, the absolute God of their universes, is the Abrahamic God Yahweh. However, his domain is sometimes referred to as {{Heaven}}, (which is even protected by angels) and under Creator/AlEwing in ''ComicBook/ImmortalHulk'' and ''ComicBook/DefendersBeyond'', references to the UsefulNotes/{{Kabbalah}} are constantly used around him, which really would make him the Abrahamic God, or at least those faiths were the closest to describing him. It's probably safe to say that, if nothing else, he is a stand in for God, just like how Mephisto is used as a stand in for Satan.
43* TheOmnipotent: In case it hasn't been made clear yet: he's the strongest Marvel character.
44* TheOmniscient: Various beings claim omniscience or are described as such. The One Above All is either the only true case of omniscience or the being who comes closest, and everything points towards the former.
45* OneSteveLimit: There’s a Celestial named One Above All created and titled as such before The One Above All was given this canonical name (His existence was only implied by descriptions before); hence why when referring to the absolute being of Marvel universe THE One Above All is required to differentiate Him from the Celestial.
46* PowerGlows: If he wants it to. He appeared as a mortal man to Spider-Man and made Spidey believe he was some regular mortal, however even TOAA's robe was glowing when he appeared before Beta Ray Bill.
47* ThePowerOfLove: When Susan Storm feared for her husband's possible death at the hands of the "all-powerful" ComicBook/SilverSurfer, Uatu the Watcher tells her that there is only one being who is truly "all-powerful", and that "His only weapon... is love!" Take a wild guess as to who he was talking about.
48* PrimordialChaos: The One Above All existed before the Living Tribunal, who has existed since the beginning of time.
49* PsychicPowers: Not a direct example but the following battle gives an idea of how powerful the One Above All is: ComicBook/DoctorStrange, who can overcome {{Eldritch Abomination}}s that can destroy multiverses, takes on the Living Tribunal in a magical fight. Strange gets {{curbstomp|Battle}}ed and [[http://media.comicvine.com/uploads/2/28671/1815863-livingtri25ne_crop_super.png admits the Living Tribunal is mighty enough to destroy both Strange and the Earth with a ''thought'']]. The Tribunal himself will tell you his power is inferior to the One Above All's.
50* ShapeShifting: Just one of his abilities.
51* SophisticatedAsHell: Most of his appearances have him speak very formally and grandiose, as you'd expect God, but his appearances in ''Fantastic Four #511'' and ''Sensational Spider-Man #40'' have him speak much more casually and informal.
52* SpellMyNameWithAThe: One Above All (no 'the') is a Celestial. ''The'' One Above All is the ultimate power in the Marvel universe.
53* StealthHiBye: Pulls one off on Peter Parker, whose SpiderSense usually makes him immune to this.
54* TopGod: Every god from every religion (even alien ones) is present somewhere in the Marvel universe. This guy is above them all. In fact, he is the top god of the Marvel multiverse: 616, Ultimate Marvel, the MCU, the various cartoon universes, etc. You name it, the One Above All is the creator of that universe.
55* TheWorfEffect: Yes, really. In ''Thanos: The Infinity Conflict'', the One Above All admits that Thanos's usage of the Astral Regulator was causing multiversal damage even beyond him to fix. In ''The Infinity Ending'', Thanos ''absorbs the One Above All''. Temporarily, yes, but still...
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:The One Below All]]
59!!The One Below All
60[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/obaimage.jpeg]]
61 [[caption-width-right:350:"You cannot see what I am! You are speaking to a mask!"]]
62->''"I howl through many mouths! I break with many hands! They are themselves but they are also me! I have all the power you give me and my weapon is HATE!!" ''
63
64Just as there is a counter force for every force, a shadow for every light, and a reaction for every action, there is [[SatanicArchetype The]] [[EldritchAbomination One]] [[TheAntiGod Below]] [[GodOfEvil All]]. The One Below is the dark twin of the Marvel multiverse's top god, the One Above All. While there have been many hell lords and devils claiming to be the one true embodiment of evil, the One Below All may be the true source of all evil, or at least the closest of any evil entity.
65
66Like the One Above All, the One Below All is apart from the physical universes, but is barred from the rest of the Multiverse, and can only extend itself through others and guide events while taking no direct role. It yearns to be free from the lowest point of creation, the opposite side of the mirror, so that it can indulge in its greatest desire... destruction and horror while feeding on the misery of all life.
67
68A malevolent entity that resides in the Below-Place - the deepest layer of Hell - the One Below All is sealed behind a metaphysical Green Door. It is the source of the elusive mutagenic third form of Gamma energy, and in a way every Gamma mutate is a facet of it.
69----
70* AlmightyIdiot: Brian Banner explains that it doesn't really have a mind of its own, only a drive. It's pure id, needing someone else to provide the ego. While it has intelligence and knows what it wants, it lacks focus and needs hosts to direct it.
71* AlmightyJanitor: '''The''' Marvel example. An EldritchAbomination below everything and everyone, both literally and figuratively, yet is TheAntiGod of the whole of Marvel and [[spoiler:the all-powerful Hulk persona of The One Above All]].
72* TheAloner: Its ultimate end goal is to kill everything everywhere so that it can be completely alone.
73-->'''One Below All:''' THE MYSTERY FRIGHTENS AND DISGUSTS ME. I WILL KILL IT. MAKE ALL HOLLOW AS I. DEAD AND DARK AS I. AND I WILL BE '''ALONE'''.
74* AlternateCompanyEquivalent: To the Great Darkness of Franchise/TheDCU fame, both being the dark counterpart to the resident {{God}} and being the immeasurably powerful source of all evil in the multiverse.
75* AlwaysABiggerFish: As a good indicator of where it sits on the food chain, an alternate future version of Doctor Strange tried to cure the Immortal Hulk of its taint via a deal with Mephisto. Y'know, Marvel's premiere Devil. Mephisto instantly said he can't, before the question was even finished.
76-->'''Strange:''' My power is almost gone. ''I'' am almost gone. And the ''Hulk'' must be returned ''home'' -- cured of his ''spiritual infection'', if possible--\
77'''Mephisto:''' [[BluntNo Oh, it's not.]] The devil in him is ''far'' stronger than ''I'' am.
78* TheAntiGod: As the opposite of the One Above All, using terms to describe itself that are a dark mirror of its benevolent counterpart. In fact, [[spoiler: the final issue of ''Immortal Hulk'' reveals the One Below All is the One Above All's Hulk: a split personality desiring only destruction.]]
79* AxCrazy: An entity of pure, unfettered destruction that would gladly destroy everything and anything in sight if it's let loose. [[spoiler:The Breaker Of Worlds, its future self after it takes over the Hulk’s body in the BadFuture]], is a haunting example of what would happen should it finally have the freedom to do what it wants.
80* TheBadGuyWins: In a possible and likely future, it will take full control of the Hulk, whereupon it will kill ''everyone'', including Galactus, Franklin Richards, and Mr. Immortal. The last two are killed not just out of the One Below All's hatred for all, but to ensure the Sentience of the Universe cannot merge with someone at the end of all things, leaving it vulnerable to be killed and assimilated by the One Below All so it becomes the Ninth Cosmos' Devourer of Worlds. In the Ninth Cosmos, it gets to work breaking apart this new iteration of the universe. It finally succeeds when it destroys O%los, the last planet, and is finally given an empty void.
81* BigDumbBody: Pretty much the main reason a lot of gamma mutates end up super strong giants with impaired minds. Its ultimate goal is becoming a Galactus-level Hulk capable of destroying everything.
82* BodySurf: If someone with the power to absorb gamma radiation tries it on someone currently possessed by a spirit host of the One Below All, the host can jump bodies to them via the gamma radiation.
83* BrokenRecord: It's only got so much to say. Most of its lines are taken from the above speech. Other than that, it mainly just tells people they have its mark.
84* CharacterizationMarchesOn: A subtle case. The narration in the arc where it first appears in its true form compares it to [[UsefulNotes/{{Zoroastrianism}} Angra Mainyu]], who ''can'' use his immense power for good, but actively chooses not to, implying the One Below All ''can'' be benevolent, but chooses to hate. However, after this, the One Below All just simply became a mindless beast who [[EvilCannotComprehendGood cannot comprehend being good]] and thus has no real moral agency.
85* ColorMotif: Heavily associated with the color green as a part of its connection to gamma radiation. To a far lesser extent it's also associated with the red gamma mutations (i.e., Red Hulk, Red She-Hulk, etc.). What the latter means, especially since it only comes about from adding cosmic radiation, is not yet clear.
86* {{Cumulonemesis}}: The closest thing to its true appearance is a giant, storming green thunderhead with glowing pinholes for eyes and a gaping maw in the Below Place.
87* DeathIsCheap: Under its auspices death is meaningless. Gamma mutates won't stay dead if it doesn't want them to.
88* DeathOfPersonality: Extended possession allows it to gradually erode all other personalities in its host until all that's left is the emptiness that is it.
89* DemonicPossession: [[PlayingWithATrope Played With]] in regards to the One Below All. On the one hand, it needs a host to directly influence the material plane or any planes beyond the Below-Place. It inhabits people and "wears them like masks on a stage" as Brian Banner puts it. However, the One Below All is also an AlmightyIdiot without a true mind and is basically a being of pure destructive id and impulse. So when the One Below All possesses you it isn't really taking you over so much as becoming a part of your mind and you become filled with its dark impulses and destructive desires. This plays in to its line "I am myself but I am also them" as there is almost no distinction between it and its host while it inhabits them. Prolonged exposure and being inhabited, on the other hand, will lead to PossessionBurnout. See the spoiler below for specifics.
90** If the One Below All's host is a spirit, they can take over anyone with gamma radiation in their bodies, gamma radiation serving as a 'door' through which the One Below All can affect the physical world. If another superhuman then absorbs the mutate's Gamma, the One Below All can then pass into them.
91** [[spoiler:In a BadFuture, the One Below All has completely possessed the body of the Hulk, having eaten all of Banner's identities]].
92* DestroyerDeity: A perfectly pure and platonic one with no interests apart from living up to its role however and whenever it can.
93* EldritchAbomination: Is an immensely powerful yet mindless being, who has nothing but bottomless hatred towards all creation. [[spoiler:In a BadFuture, the One Below All inflicts upon the Eighth and Ninth Cosmoi a CosmicHorrorStory straight out of Lovecraft's darkest imagination.]]
94* EmeraldPower: Is the source of power behind gamma mutation, commonly associated with the color green, with the arc around it being built up on revelations of the Green Door.
95* EmotionControl: While the One Below All can only directly take control of one host, it can influence the negative emotions of any number of people anywhere, and the more negative the person feels, the more control the One Below All has.
96* EmptyShell: A recurring motif is emptiness or being a hollowed out husk. It wants to make the universe as empty as it is within, by destroying all life and snuffing out all light.
97* EvilCannotComprehendGood: An extremely literal example as the One Below All is a creature of destruction and evil with no true mind, only impulses and malevolent intelligence. It needs hosts to direct itself and to know and understand what it should do next. Not only does the One Below All not comprehend good, it's absolutely incapable of understanding good.
98* EvilCounterpart: Of course, as the evil opposite to the One Above All; but furthermore, in the finale of ''Immortal Hulk'', [[spoiler:it's revealed to be the One Above All's own Hulk-like persona, an aspect of it as a reflection of every mortal]].
99* EvilOnlyHasToWinOnce: [[spoiler:We get a glimpse of what would happen if the One Below All managed to take control of Hulk and turn him into a Galactus-style entity. It proceeds to systematically destroy the entirety of the Ninth Cosmos, leaving a hollow, dead void, with nothing except it.]]
100* EvilIsNotAToy: This is done indirectly in regards to the One Below All. Over the years, many people have tried to use Gamma energy and research for their own ends. What nobody ever realized was that the reason Gamma could create monsters and miracles was because of its elusive third form, which cannot be defined or analyzed. Turns out this third form is power coming straight from the One Below All, and doesn't follow the rules of science or nature because it's power drawn from an EldritchAbomination that is TheAntiGod for the Marvel multiverse. All of the people, good or bad, that have been trying to use Gamma energy for their own ends all these years had no idea they were essentially trying to use the power of the ultimate evil. This is also why Gamma energy and research can never create anything positive or beneficial. The One Below All is the opposite of creation and the dark side of existence. It and by extension its power can never be anything but destructive or harmful.
101* {{Foil}}: The One Below All is the inverse of the One Above All beyond just name. The One Above All is connected to and a part of everything and can move through the multiverse freely while altering anything directly. The One Below All is barred from existing in the multiverse, and while it is connected to everything its power and influence are subtle and small in scale, but can have far-ranging repercussions. The One Above All appears as a mortal being depending on the viewer, by finding a bit of themselves in the almighty. This serves to put them at ease and understand their creator, at least in a small way. The One Below All appears differently depending on the viewer but never takes the form of anything remotely mortal or like a "person", showing an absence of "humanity" or aspect of whatever races perceive it. Further, its appearance is also meant to terrify and intimidate the viewer with the visage seemingly being alien for the most part.
102* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: {{Inverted|Trope}}; The One Below All uses avatars to avoid breaking mortal minds because it wants them to suffer instead. It's most often shown using Brian Banner, specifically because it unnerves the Devil Hulk. For others it uses a NightmareFace.
103* FreudianTrio: After a fashion it forms this between itself as the id, the One Above All as the superego and any mortal as the ego.
104* GodIsEvil: By a technicality of [[spoiler: being the One Above All's evil half]] and having a greater level of power to fit the bill.
105* GodzillaThreshold: The One Above All only brings the One Below All out intentionally if a threat to the natural cycle of creation and destruction presents itself. If the culprit is lucky, it will just get destroyed. If it isn't, the One Below All will let it live. [[FateWorseThanDeath In a fashion.]]
106* GrandTheftMe:
107** Brian Banner and the One Below All do this to Sasquatch in ''ComicBook/ImmortalHulk''.
108** Later on, Brian Banner explains that since the Leader did this to him, the One Below All can do the same to ''him'', since it's wearing Brian "like a mask". It then proceeds to do just that.
109** In one BadFuture, [[spoiler:the One Below All devours Bruce Banner and the Hulks from the inside, co-opting their body to usurp Galactus's role in the next universe, where it becomes the Breaker of Worlds and [[OmnicidalManiac wipes out all life]]]].
110* GreaterScopeVillain:
111** In ''ComicBook/ImmortalHulk'', it influences events towards opening the Green Door completely and bringing everything into its domain, particularly through its host, Brian Banner. Indeed, it seems to have been doing this since before Bruce Banner was born, when Brian discovered gamma radiation could act as a door, and caught a glimpse of the One Below All on the other side.
112** During the events of ''Absolute Carnage'', Bruce speculates that it might be behind Knull, god of the symbiotes, and therefore responsible for Venom and Carnage as well. ''[[ComicBook/Defenders2021 Defenders]]'' Vol. 6 elaborates on this by revealing that [[spoiler:Anti-All, the dark dragon who is implied to be the ultimate progenitor of Knull and other dark entities, originated in the Below-Place]].
113** As the most powerful dark entity in the Marvel multiverse, it may be this to ''all'' of Marvel. Not just the comics, but all the movies, TV shows, and video games. Wherever there was evil, whether that be Doctor Doom of Earth-616, Thanos of [[Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse Earth-199999]], Kingpin of WesternAnimation/SpiderManIntoTheSpiderVerse, or even Kid Miracleman of [[ComicBook/{{Miracleman}} Earth-18]], the One Below All was there, influencing them.
114* GreenAndMean: The closest to its true form is a green cloud, as it's the source of gamma radiation. As for the mean part, well, it's an OmnicidalManiac working on ThePowerOfHate, that's plenty "mean".
115* HeartIsAnAwesomePower: {{Inverted|Trope}} as its power is hate, but while the One Below All is infinite in power and scope being omniscient and omnipotent, it is trapped behind the green door while being barred from directly controlling the universe(s). However, it can influence the heart and minds of the inhabitants of the multiverse with its absolute control over negativity and evil. While the One Above All won't use his power over love to manipulate his creations as he is intrigued by the mystery and allows his creations free will, the One Below All is repulsed and disgusted by the mystery, actively hates all other life and despises free will, so it had no reservations using its power over evil to manipulate and control any number of beings in the multiverse. This also implies that, like the One Above All, the One Below All moves InMysteriousWays because it can actively influence any evil creature no matter how powerful (It's the biggest and baddest thing around, period) but there is no way of knowing when it's enacting its plans through pawns, but given how many times the universe/multiverse has almost been completely destroyed, Bruce Banner and the Hulk probably aren't the only means it's using to destroy everything.
116* HeroKiller: In the BadFuture, it [[spoiler:eats Franklin Richards, Galactus, Mr Immortal and every Hulk persona]].
117* LightIsNotGood: As part of its association with gamma radiation it's usually heralded by a brilliant green radiance.
118* LeakingCanOfEvil: It's largely sealed in the Below Place behind the Green Door, but as its debut series shows this does almost nothing to prevent its influence from reaching across the multiverse.
119* LegacyCharacter: [[spoiler:In the BadFuture, the One Below All possesses the Hulk and becomes the last living being in the universe, thereby becoming Galactus' heir in the next universe. The One Below All also takes on the Green Scar's outfit and nickname of 'Worldbreaker', and [[ArcWords never stops making the universe's inhabitants pay]]]].
120* MindHive: Of a sort. The One Below All can only inhabit one soul at a time but it can influence any number of souls, and the more evil the soul or negative emotions present, the more influence it has.
121* MouthOfSauron: It needs a host to affect things directly, a soul it can speak and act through. In ''ComicBook/ImmortalHulk'', that host is Brian Banner, Bruce Banner's ArchnemesisDad. [[spoiler:Until the Leader forcibly takes his place]].
122* NuclearMutant: ''It's the reason'' why gamma radiation kills you. It's the manifestation of the evil being's utter hatred and contempt for your very existence. Those who don't die or succumb to its poison are mutated horribly enough to fall prey to its control.
123* OmnicidalManiac: Where the One Above is intrigued by life, the One Below is disgusted and frightened, and wants to kill everything everywhere, just so it can be alone. In fact, its ultimate goal is the freedom to destroy everything in the universe if not the multiverse, leaving only a dark, empty ruin for all time.
124* PaintingTheMedium: It doesn't have speech bubbles. Its dialogue is conveyed through red text superimposed on the page, signifying it as something malignant with a scope far beyond comprehension.
125* ThePowerOfHate: Its only weapon is hate, and it only has as much power as it's given.
126* SatanicArchetype: Yes, these guys are running around the Marvel Universe by the dozens, most notably Mephisto, but the One Below All is usually referred to with references to the Devil. Considering it rules over the deepest Hell and has more power than any Hell-Lord could ever dream of, it may be ''the'' Devil.
127-->'''Puck:''' Now, I've met ''a'' devil. Which was fun. But I think ''this''... this is the definite article.
128* SealedEvilInACan: Despite being like the One Above All in that it's metaphysical, [[TheOmnipresent transcending the very Multiverse]], being present everywhere, including [[ParanoiaFuel right there in your room hating you]], it's been [[AlwaysABiggerFish forbidden from interacting]] with the Multiverse or any one soul. Hence the name, it's not the One Above All's [[YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood second in command after all]], it's the one BELOW every living being.
129* SeeingThroughAnothersEyes: What the One Below All can do with anyone, much like the One Above All.
130* SicklyGreenGlow: Its association with gamma radiation comes with a lot of neon green.
131* SuperpoweredEvilSide: To the [[spoiler:One Above All]]. It's basically the god of these, and is a grim reminder that everyone has a [[spoiler:Hulk]].
132[[/folder]]
133
134[[folder:The Living Tribunal]]
135!!The Living Tribunal
136[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/riwtqzc.jpg]]
137
138The Living Tribunal is the supreme authority of the multiverse and one of its most powerful entities, second only to the One Above All. In general it only enters the field when all other forces have been outmatched.
139----
140* AllPowerfulBystander: He doesn't interfere often, but when he chooses to get involved he utterly destroys any and all entities he opposes, no matter how powerful they are.
141* AlwaysABiggerFish: He's by a pretty solid margin the biggest fish we actually get to ''see'', and regularly plays this trope against assorted cosmic horrors who, while ludicrously powerful, are never as ludicrously powerful as ''him''. In absolute terms, he's the second biggest fish around: for all his might, he's still small and humble compared to [[{{God}} the One Above All]].
142* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Bar a couple of non-canon or semi-canon examples, the Tribunal is consistently portrayed as the most powerful force in all of existence, bar the Creator.
143* BigDamnHeroes: The Living Tribunal doesn't fight {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, it ''curb stomps them''.
144* BigGood: The Biggest Good in the multiverse, second only to {{God}} himself.
145* BlueAndOrangeMorality: His rules for getting involved are... strange. For example, one of his reasons for not stopping Thanos [[ComicBook/TheInfinityGauntlet when he first got the Infinity Stones]] was because by becoming an all-powerful being and disrupting the cosmic balance, Thanos was taking natural selection to its logical conclusion. This is despite the fact that Thanos is, you know, insane and evil.
146* DeathIsCheap: Fried by Master Order and Lord Chaos during ''The Ultimates'', thanks to the manipulations of the First Firmament. When everything's over, he's resurrected, and sits the two down for a long ''talk'' about things.
147* DontFearTheReaper: The Tribunal has a reaper-like form for when Death dies, like his regular form, but reaper-y. He's even got a giant scythe, but he's still the same old Tribunal.
148* GodIsNeutral: He is the supreme being in the CosmicEntity hierarchy and only answers to [[{{God}} The One Above All]], but acts as a neutral figure only concerned with keeping cosmic balance. Even universal threats like [[ComicBook/TheInfinityGauntlet Thanos getting the Infinity Gauntlet]] isn't a concern, and the Tribunal only intervenes when the multiverse is in real danger.
149* GodzillaThreshold: If he shows up, you know this has officially crossed the Multiversal level. He has very particular rules on when he will cross said threshold, however. For instance, during ComicBook/TheInfinityGauntlet crisis, the greater cosmic forces of the universe, such as Infinity, were refused help from the Tribunal. According to the Tribunal, as powerful as Thanos was, it was of no concern to him, as a) even with all that power, Thanos' influence would not extend to rest of the multiverse, and b) Thanos gained the power of the Gems through his own strength, so, by the Tribunal's standards, no real crime was committed. This is after Thanos killed half the universe, too.
150* GoodIsNotNice: The Tribunal is perfectly willing to snuff out sentient lifeforms by the trillions, if it would prevent the entire multiverse from imploding.
151* JudgeJuryAndExecutioner: And a head for each.
152* KilledOffForReal: The Living Tribunal seen after ''ComicBook/{{Secret Wars|2015}}'' is not the original Tribunal, but rather an alternate Adam Warlock. The old one's still dead after being killed by the Beyonders.
153* LegacyCharacter: While it's unknown who or what the original Living Tribunal was, the one that exists post-Incursions is an alternate-universe Adam Warlock who was recruited to the position by The One Above All.
154* MultipleHeadCase: He has three heads, or technically a single head with three faces.
155* NumberTwo: At least in the ''ComicBook/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy'' timeline, the Tribunal is followed around by a Celestial named Scathan, whose role seems to be that of a "second opinion" man to the Tribunal's decisions. This came in handy when [[MegaManning the Tribunal's powers were copied]] by an OmnicidalManiac; Scathan simply denied him permission to use them, allowing the real Tribunal to deliver a well-deserved smackdown.
156* TheOmnipotent: Or so close as to not matter, anyway. Even someone with the Infinity Gauntlet can't beat him.
157* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Luckily for the Marvel universe, he is not unwise while using his great powers.
158* UnskilledButStrong: He contains power that dwarfs even the Infinity Gauntlet, but his fighting skill is normal at best.
159* WeaksauceWeakness: Compared to everything else he may as well be omnipotent but if his three heads can't agree on something he won't act. This can be used to keep him out of a lot of plots he would solve before they began.
160* TheWorfEffect: Despite his phenomenal power, he actually has losses under his belt. He was defeated by Protege, who used PowerCopying against him. He was killed by the Beyonders in the "Time Runs Out" event, and then he was killed again by Logos within ''The Ultimates'' Volume 2. The other loses due to weaker Manifestation Bodies, or not part of continuity.
161* WorfHadTheFlu: His death in ''Ultimates'' vol. 2 comes right after Master Order notes that the new multiverse means all the old rules, like the ones saying he's in charge, are currently uncertain. Cue sneak attack.
162[[/folder]]
163
164!!Abstract Concepts
165[[folder:Abraxas]]
166!!Abraxas
167[[quoteright:243:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/86863_180448_abraxas.jpg]]
168
169Abraxas is the embodiment of the multiverse's destruction.
170----
171* AmazingTechnicolorPopulation: His skin is green.
172* TheAntiGod: Less so than [[ComicBook/ImmortalHulk The One Below All]], but as the antithesis to Eternity (the personification of the universe) he fits this bill.
173* CosmicEntity: One of the higher-ranked cosmic entities in the Marvel hierarchy, meant to personify destruction and anti-creation in contrast to Eternity.
174* DestroyerDeity: Well not a deity, but similar to Galactus functions as a cosmic force of destruction. [[AboveGoodAndEvil Unlike Galactus]], he's not satisfied with [[PlanetEater destroying worlds]] and won't stop until the multiverse itself is destroyed.
175* EvilerThanThou: One of the main reasons why killing Galactus is a bad idea; he is ''far'' worse. While Galactus is a PlanetEater, even he couldn't eat all the life in the universe within its lifespan and is often NecessarilyEvil in this. Abraxas almost destroyed the multiverse shortly after he broke free and proved his medal by slaughtering multiple Galactus from different universes.
176* GenericDoomsdayVillain: Abraxas was created for the sole purpose of providing a tangible in-universe justification for the continued existence of Galactus, and as such is a fairly shallow character; he randomly popped out of Eternity, and wants to destroy literally everything for no reason other than because that is simply what he is there to do as the AnthropomorphicPersonification of destruction itself whose existence revolves entirely around being the antithesis of the being of pure creation that is Eternity. He exists to destroy, and he destroys because he exists.
177* HumanoidAbomination: Compared to some [[CosmicEntity cosmic entities]] he looks more or less like a well-built human minus [[AmazingTechnicolorPopulation the green skin]], but is still a universe-old CosmicEntity who functions as anti-existence.
178* ModestyTowel: Or cape, which he uses to cover himself.
179* OmnicidalManiac: His very reason for being. During his rampage he tries to get the Ultimate Nullifer to nullify creation as a whole.
180* ReligiousAndMythologicalThemeNaming: Named after the archon/mythological figure Abraxas/Abrasax, who shows up in Gnostic folklore.
181* RetGone: Reed Richards used the Ultimate Nullifier, [[HoistByHisOwnPetard the very weapon he was trying to find]], to erase him from existence.
182* SealedEvilInACan: Imprisoned within Galactus again upon his revival and the Ulimate Nullifier being using against him to remake the multiverse without him.
183* SealedInsideAPersonShapedCan: Half of why Galactus exists [[PlanetEater and has to eat planets]] is to contain him, and he broke free when Galactus died.
184* SecondaryColorNemesis: Green; his body, eyes and the cloth he wears are green.
185[[/folder]]
186
187[[folder:Anthropomorpho]]
188!!Anthropomorpho the Prime Manifester
189[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/anthropomorpho_28earth_61629_from_quasar_vol_1_37_0001.jpg]]
190
191Anthropomorpho is the Prime Manifester of the Manifestations, which provide bodies for cosmic entities when they, well, manifest. Basically, they are the AnthropomorphicPersonification of {{Anthropomorphic Personification}}s.
192
193----
194* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Of {{Anthropomorphic Personification}}s. Don't think about it too hard.
195* MyselfMyAvatar: They make proxies or avatars for cosmic beings, since, well, cosmic beings don't really have bodies. The bodies they make are called Manifestation Bodies, or "M-Bodies" for short.
196
197[[/folder]]
198
199[[folder:Black Winter]]
200!!Black Winter
201[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/black_winter.png]]
202
203!!! '''Alter Ego''': None
204!!! '''First Appearance''': ''ComicBook/{{Thor|2020}}'' (Vol. 5) #4
205
206A cosmic entity that serves as a multiversal counterpart to Galactus, the Black Winter devours entire universes and was responsible for the destruction of the Sixth Cosmos.
207----
208* CosmicEntity: The Black Winter is referred to as an [[TheOldGods Elder God]] alongside the likes of the God-Tempest and Phoenix Force, and is to Galactus what Galactus is to the Silver Surfer -- being the entity responsible for the destruction of the Sixth Cosmos.
209* DestroyerDeity: The Black Winter is a devourer of ''universes'' and is classified as an Elder God alongside the likes of the King in Black, the God Tempest, and the Phoenix. He inflicts Galactus with a CurbStompBattle when he first arrives in Earth-616, his dark frost causes anything it touches to rot to nothingness, and his mere presence poisons Yggdrasil with dark frost.
210* EnigmaticEmpoweringEntity: The Black Winter reveals that it was the one who made Galen into Galactus, having chosen to spare him when it devoured the Sixth Cosmos in order to act as its Herald, and it's displeased that he's shirked his duties and lied about his origins.
211* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: Like the One Below All, it inverts this trope. The Black Winter takes the form of its victim's cause of death as it destroys them.
212* GreaterScopeVillain: It serves as this to Galactus himself, having devoured the Sixth Cosmos and spared Galen to act as his Herald.
213* AnIcePerson: As its moniker suggests, the Black Winter is associated with [[PowerOfTheVoid darkness]] and ice
214* MakeThemRot: The Black Winter's dark ice causes whatever it touches to crumble into nothingness, and even Galactus is severely injured by it.
215* YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm: Like Galactus, the Black Winter appears differently to each person who beholds it -- embodying the one to bring about their destined demise. For (a LawyerFriendlyCameo of) the Creator/DCUniverse it's Darkseid and Perpetua, for Galactus it's Thor as the Herald of Thunder, and for Thor it takes the form of every enemy he's ever fought [[spoiler:before finally showing him a vision of Thanos wielding an Infinity Stone-encrusted Mjolnir]]. The closest anyone comes to seeing its "true" form is a being resembling a monstrous version of Eternity with a three-eyed SkullForAHead.
216[[/folder]]
217
218[[folder:Death]]
219!!Death
220[[quoteright:280:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/591118_1.jpg]]
221->'''"Oh, in case we have met before and I have forgotten the occasion -- my name is Death. I meet so many people, of course, that it is quite impossible to remember all their names."'''
222
223The AnthropomorphicPersonification of Death in the Marvel Universe. While there are many death gods in the MU, she is the true [[TheGrimReaper grim reaper]] and all other death gods/entities pay court to her. Of the big 4 cosmic entities (the others being her brother Oblivion and her counter-parts Infinity and Eternity) she is by far the most active when it comes to interacting with mortals directly. Initially she was TheSpeechless but in recent years has been shown to converse more often with others. She is more or less a neutral force and prioritizes maintaining the cosmic balance between life and death. It often takes the form of a young woman, as which it earned the affections of the mad Titan ComicBook/{{Thanos}}. It grants authority to various Death Gods, Skyfathers and Hell Lords to take charge of souls after death or under certain arrangements. Though a largely amoral entity that ultimately desires the end of life itself, it is not actively malevolent and sees its duty as bringing an end to pain. It is thus opposed to those that are out to do far, far worse. The opposite of Eternity.
224----
225* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Speaks for itself.
226* AntiVillain: When Thanos killed half the universe to impress her, it worked. But though she has no problem whatever with killing she is averse to causing needless suffering or worse.
227* BatmanGambit: ''The Thanos Imperative'' is one of hers. Basically, resurrect Thanos as completely immortal, and wait for him to meet the Many-Angled Ones, who need to kill Death in a reality in order to infest it... of course, in order to do that, they need to kill Thanos, which kind of requires Death to make an appearance. At which point... ''boom''.
228* TheDeathOfDeath: Was at risk of this in an arc of ''ComicBook/JaneFosterValkyrie'', as gamma mutates and mutants no longer being able to actually die thanks to [[ComicBook/ImmortalHulk the Green Door]] and [[ComicBook/XMenTheKrakoanAge the Five's resurrection protocols]] rendered her purpose [[DeathIsCheap even cheaper than before]]. Jane successfully advocates for her survival, avoiding another [[ComicBook/TheThanosImperative another Cancerverse]].
229* DependingOnTheWriter: Her attitude. She can be distant, implacable, malicious, or apathetic, depending on who is writing her at any given time.
230* DidYouThinkICantFeel: This is [[ImpliedTrope implied]] to be the case in the comic ''Ben Reilly: The Scarlet Spider'', when Ben made a comment about how he's not like her, someone indifferent to the live lost near them. She reacted violently to that supposition before returning to normal.
231-->'''Ben:''' Just another life to add to the toll...\
232'''Death:''' You feel bad?\
233'''Ben:''' Well of course I do! I'm not like you! Some unemotional cosmic thing that goes around killing without any kind of remorse!\
234'''Death:''' (Putting on her GameFace) Do not ever presume to know how I feel! (going back to normal) Sorry, I'm sorry. That was rude.
235* DontFearTheReaper: While her [[ComicBook/{{Thanos}} consort and lover]] would gladly [[OmnicidalManiac kill everything in the universe for her]], and though she would find that very romantic, she is a necessary component of the universe and, further, sees herself as the end of pain and suffering. She is not actively malevolent or sadistic. In spite of being the representation of the end of all life, she is a necessary force in creation and an inevitability. A memorable example was during ''The Death of Captain Marvel'' where she was treated as the end of one thing and the start of something else. Averted in ''ComicBook/ThanosRising'', where she outright groomed Thanos into becoming the monster he would become feared as.
236-->'''"I shall bring you--peace! As I have brought so many others before you--Thus has it ever been-- Thus must it ever be!"'''
237* FateWorseThanDeath: While she is far from ''nice'', when you compare her to the likes of Dormammu -- who turns life and death into a neverending torture camp, or Shuma-Gorath -- who turns life itself into a cancer and enslaves you mind, body and soul, Death is practically a saint and is rarely directly opposed to Earth's heroes.
238* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: Zigzagged. She doesn't really have a true form per se, so she looks like what people's incarnations of the Grim Reaper would be to them. Generally however she either appears as an incredibly attractive hooded woman or a hooded skeleton. Defied when she appeared to Thanos as a little girl during a LoveConfession to him, which understandably unnerved him. She replied that he shouldn't expect comfort from Death.
239* TheGrimReaper: Will often appear as the stereotypical skeleton in a dark robe, though she will occasionally take a much more attractive form.
240* HumanityIsInfectious: Once spent time inhabiting Margo Chandler as a gambit to hide from a crazed death god who had the power of all the live of a single galaxy. She was influenced by Margo's personality and emotions. Since then, whenever death walks the earth, she does so in the guise of Margo.
241* LadyMacbeth: In ComicBook/{{Thanos}}' origin story, she is depicted as actively manipulating him to become an omnicidal lunatic to curry her favor by appearing as his ImaginaryFriend since childhood.
242* ManipulativeBastard: In ''ComicBook/ThanosRising'', it's revealed that she's been manipulating the Mad Titan since he was a boy into becoming a genocidal lunatic.
243* MasterOfTheMixedMessage: With Thanos. ''Especially'' when written by Jim Starlin. Does she like him? Does she not? Does she approve of his constant rampages in her name? Who can tell, because she never just ''says'' whether to cut the crap or not.
244* MsFanservice: In her alternate form, she is a beautiful human woman with a brunette bob haircut and a {{Stripperiffic}} outfit that is very similar to that of ComicBook/LadyDeath. And she is often draping herself over Thanos or Thane or whomever she is manipulating at the time.
245* StalkerWithACrush: ComicBook/{{Thanos}}, though she is one to ComicBook/{{Deadpool}}, thus earning Deadpool the ire of Thanos. HilarityEnsues.
246* UnskilledButStrong: She possesses vast power, but her fighting skill is normal at best. The fan-power ratings on the Marvel Wikia suggest otherwise, however.
247* WantingIsBetterThanHaving: Her maybe crush on Deadpool stems from the fact that he can't die.
248* TheVoiceless: Barely speaks at all in many comics.
249[[/folder]]
250
251[[folder:Eternity]]
252!!Eternity
253[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eternity_earth_616_001.jpg]]
254
255The AnthropomorphicPersonification of Eternity has existed since the dawn of time and represents one of the fundamental aspects of the universe. It is enemies with some of the most powerful and dangerous evils in the cosmos which seek either to kill it or take its power for themselves, which in either case will result in [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt the End of Reality as We Know It]]. He has assisted Doctor Strange when he comes into battle with these enemies.
256----
257* AndIMustScream: At the end of ''ComicBook/{{Secret Wars|2015}}'', after [[spoiler:reviving, he's attacked and imprisoned by the First Firmament, which begins corrupting the multiverse, while all Eternity can do, besides occasionally chat with lesser cosmic beings, is scream]].
258* AnthropomorphicPersonification: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Of Eternity.]]
259%%* BigGood:
260* BlueAndOrangeMorality: Eternity doesn't think like we do, or share our human concerns. Nevertheless, he can occasionally be considerate.
261* CelestialBody: He resembles a humanoid starfield, filled with stars, galaxies and planets, and with a face floating around his head.
262* CosmicKeystone: If it goes, reality goes.
263* GeniusLoci: Each Eternity ''is'' their universe given an anthropomorphic form. Together, they make up an Eternity that is the whole multiverse given a humanoid form.
264* GoodCounterpart: To Oblivion, the Chaos King, or whatever CosmicBeing happens to be personifying [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt the End Of All Things]] at that particular moment.
265* FightingAShadow: In a way; forces that threaten it usually only threaten a singular continuity, and that specific continuity isn't replaced. Eternity can be destroyed on a universal level but it takes a different order of power to affect the entirety that is his multiversal self.
266* LegacyCharacter: What's only been hinted at is elaborated on post-''Secret Wars''; Eternity is the seventh instance of TheMultiverse that has existed -- technically the eighth, but the first existence only consisted of a single universe.
267* PowersThatBe: Basically this. They're the deciding force behind who becomes Captain Universe.
268* SentientCosmicForce: He embodies the multiverse.
269%%* SpaceMaster: As the embodiment of universes.
270* TimeMaster: To an extent, his sister-self Infinity is the real controller of time.
271* UnskilledButStrong: He doesn't have any high level fighting skills, but he is virtually omnipotent.
272* TheWorfEffect: It seems to be traditional that whenever a writer wants to introduce a new villain at the universal threat level, one of the first things they'll have him do is defeat/imprison/displace/frighten/infect Eternity. During ''ComicBook/TheUltimates2015'' it's revealed [[spoiler: he's been chained up by the First Firmament]].
273[[/folder]]
274
275[[folder:The Fulcrum]]
276!!The Fulcrum
277[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_fulcrum.jpg]]
278
279The Fulcrum is a mysterious entity that operates as a bartender at a dimension called "the Vestibule." This is where Eternals and Celestials go when they die. He's described as "all-powerful" and "all-knowing," although nothing is really known about it. He may or may not be the One Above All.
280----
281* AmbiguouslyRelated: Described as "all-powerful and all-knowing" by a ''Celestial'', is the creator of the cosmic system, and takes on a form resembling Creator/JackKirby, which makes many readers believe he's an alias or aspect of the One Above All. However, nothing has been confirmed since [[ChuckCunninghamSyndrome he hasn't shown up again since 2009]].
282* AuthorAvatar: He tells Sersi to call him "Jack", and even resembles a younger Creator/JackKirby.
283* TheBartender: Acts as this to the Vestibule, which takes the appearance of a bar, where he listens to the stories of dead Eternals. He also makes a really good vodka martini.
284* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: Despite being an immensely powerful cosmic entity, which would make one assume he would make another appearance ''somewhere'', he's only appeared in ''ComicBook/Eternals2008''.
285* TheOmnipotent: Described as such by the Dreaming Celestial. And if a ''Celestial'' remarks on how powerful someone is, you know they can pack a punch.
286* WreathedInFlames: What appears to be his true form is a humanoid mass of cosmic fire.
287
288[[/folder]]
289
290[[folder:The Griever at the End of All Things]]
291!!The Griever at the End of All Things
292[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/6609585_fantastic_four_002_008.jpg]]
293
294A being which describes itself as entropy, heat and death. She appears at the end of all things.
295----
296* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Of entropy. There seem to be a lot of these, don't there?
297* CreativeSterility: Since her purpose is to destroy universes she can't innovate any technology of her own.
298* CripplingOverspecialization: A cosmic being meant to destroy universes is not so good at focusing that immense power on single individuals any more than a person can choose to sterilize a single germ rather than an entire room. She also can't create and is entirely dependent on technology created by others to actually travel to different universes. If it gets destroyed then she's stranded with no capability to repair it on her own.
299* HiddenEyes: Her headpiece occults her eyes.
300* RedAndBlackAndEvilAllOver: Her clothes are black and her headpiece is red.
301* {{Underboobs}}: As her outfit shows.
302* TheWorfEffect: How do we know that she's a threat? She kills the Molecule Man, who can erase Galactus from existence with a thought.
303[[/folder]]
304
305[[folder:The In-Betweener]]
306!!The In-Betweener
307[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/in_betweener_28earth_61629_from_all_new_official_handbook_of_the_marvel_universe_update_vol_1_1_0001.jpg]]
308->''I am everything for I am nothing! I am a Concept... of Concepts! Life and Death... Good and Evil... Reality and Illusion... all these things do I know and affect but never do they touch me!''
309-->-- The In-Betweener, ''Silver Surfer'' vol 3 #17
310
311An agent of Lord Chaos and Master Order, the In-Betweener is the personification of the balance between all things: life and death, reality and illusion, good and evil, logic and emotion, existence and nothingness, god and man. He is considered the opposite of Galactus, for while Galactus serves no one, neither life nor death, the In-Betweener is supposed to serve ''both''.
312
313----
314* BalanceBetweenGoodAndEvil: That's what he's supposed to maintain, which doesn't always mean he's good.
315* LiteralSplitPersonality: During Geoff Johns's ''Avengers'', In-Betweener got split between chaos and order, who were extremely reluctant to be merged back.
316[[/folder]]
317
318[[folder:Infinity]]
319!!Infinity
320[[quoteright:248:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/180050_72861_infinity.jpg]]
321
322The counterpart of Eternity, but appears as a female. Believed to embody the concept of space, and along with Eternity embodies the space/time continuum. Perhaps better described as "the other side of the coin," and not as a fully separate entity from Eternity. Infinity is the embodiment of the seventh Marvel Universe.
323----
324* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Of Infinity itself, all that ever will be, doing double-duty with her brother, Eternity.
325* DistaffCounterpart: Infinity is vaguely depicted as feminine as a counterpart to Eternity being masculine.
326* TheNthDoctor: As ''The Ultimates'' reveals, Infinity is the seventh iteration of the concept (or possibly the eighth, depending on who you ask.)
327* TimeyWimeyBall: Infinity embodies the temporal aspects of the multiverse, and this is Marvel we're talking about with all sorts of time travel shenanigans. That being said, it being an incarnation of the multiverse in a preceding position (possibly the pre-Secret Wars version of it) is a notable example.
328[[/folder]]
329
330[[folder:Logos]]
331!!Logos
332[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/logos_28cosmic_entity29_28earth_61629_from_ultimates_2_vol_2_3_001.jpg]]
333
334The merged form of Lord Chaos, Master Order, and the In-Betweener. Manipulated by the First Firmament, Logos tries to impose its own law on the Multiverse, killing all of the Celestials and turning Galactus back into the Devourer. However, the Ultimates ultimately defeat him.
335
336----
337* FusionDance: Logos was made when Master Order and Lord Chaos forced the In-Betweener to merge with them together.
338* LogicalWeakness: As Logos is a personification of law, [[ComicBook/BlackPanther T'Challa]], as a king, is able to physically tear Logos apart with his bare hands because it can be a fragile thing "in the hands of one man."
339* MeaningfulName: "Logos" is also the term for the Word of God. Considering that Logos looks like a Biblical angel (with what looks like three faces and seven wings), this is on purpose.
340* UpsettingTheBalance: Logos upsets the balance of the new Multiverse, allowing the First Firmament to begin absorbing everything into itself.
341[[/folder]]
342
343[[folder:Lord Chaos and Master Order]]
344!!Lord Chaos and Master Order
345[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ultimates_2_vol_2_3_textless.jpg]]
346 [[caption-width-right:350:Master Order and Lord Chaos with the In-Betweener in between.]]
347
348Master Order is the personification of uniformity, orderliness, and immutability, while Lord Chaos is the personification of chaos, destruction and confusion. They cannot exist without each other and, together, they created the In-Betweener to maintain the balance.
349
350----
351* BothOrderAndChaosAreDangerous: Yep. As far as cosmic entities are concerned, they are probably the most dangerous aside from Death. When they merge with the In-Betweener to create Logos, it almost destroys the Multiverse. In an alternate future, the two of them drove Adam Warlock completely insane by yammering endlessly at him, turning him into the Magus.
352* OxymoronicBeing: As Galactus pointed out in a fight with them, Lord Chaos is inherently weakened by being part of a system.
353[[/folder]]
354
355[[folder:Master of the Sun]]
356
357A possible personification of the galaxies themselves, and the one who chooses the Star-Lord. If he exists.
358----
359* AmbiguousSituation: As of 2022, whether the Master of the Sun really exists at all is super-sketchy. He might, or he might be a hallucination Peter Quill had. Not helping is the very recap pages of 2020's ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' suggest TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou, with mentions of the Master of the Sun being struck out.
360* AnthropomorphicPersonification: If he exists, for stars.
361* TheChooserOfTheOne: He decided to make Peter into a Star-Lord. Quill wasn't his first choice, but he decided to give him the title anyway.
362* EnigmaticEmpoweringEntity: For the Star-Lord. The Master shows up and makes people a Star-Lord for unclear reasons. Years later, Peter Quill admits even he's not sure what he was really supposed to do.
363* {{Retcon}}: Thanks to MCU synergy, he was retconned out in Sam Humpries' ''Star-Lord'' as just a hallucination Peter had. Al Ewing's ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' decides to muddy the waters by suggesting he wasn't ''just'' a hallucination (after all, in the Marvel universe, dreams can be binding...) and that someone or something was trying to erase his presence.
364
365[[/folder]]
366
367[[folder:Mistress Love]]
368!!Mistress Love
369[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mistress_love_28earth_61629_from_thanos_the_infinity_finale_vol_1_1_001.jpg]]
370
371Mistress Love is the physical embodiment of love. Her gender and appearance are mutable. Her male aspect was once coveted by the Enchantress.
372----
373* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Mistress Love is an abstract being who is the cosmic embodiment of love itself.
374* LoveBeALady: She ''is'' love itself, an emotion often considered feminine. While she has taken on alternate genders when encountering other characters in some cases, her physical form will typically resemble a feminine woman.
375* PinkIsFeminine: Most usually takes the form of a beautiful tall blond female humanoid with pink colored flowing garb.
376* SuperEmpowering: Mistress Love has the ability to empower worshipers or those who call upon her aid with awesome cosmic abilities.
377* TakenForGranite: One of the cosmic entities turned into a statue by Thanos during ComicBook/TheInfinityGauntlet.
378[[/folder]]
379
380[[folder:Oblivion]]
381!!Oblivion
382[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/oblivion_large.jpg]]
383
384The counterpart of Death, but appears as a male. Embodies the nothingness from which everything came and will eventually return to. Perhaps better described as "the other side of the coin," and not as a fully separate entity from Death.
385----
386* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Of the nothingness creation emerged from and will one day return to.
387* CessationOfExistence: What happens to anyone that falls under his purview. While Death gets the people who simply die, Oblivion gets the people who are erased from existence due to being RetGone. Those consigned to his domain are lost in the infinite void without awareness of self or surroundings. While you might think that it should be possible to bring back the person who was erased, as a multiverse, it's literally impossible to change things in your own past and when someone travels in time, they're creating another universe where the timeline splits so there is a version of the peson you care about alive and well but the original one is cast into nothingness for all time and beyond.
388* DealWithTheDevil: He made a deal with Phyla-Vell, allowing her to rescue Moondragon from the Dragon of the Moon in exchange for killing the Magus when the time came. [[spoiler:When Phyla failed, Oblivion and Maelstrom set her up to be killed.]]
389* GreaterScopeVillain: ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' hints that at least some of the events of ''War of Kings'', and the following events, were part of Oblivion's plans. He's also this to ''ComicBook/ChaosWar'' and ''ComicBook/KingInBlack'', as the Chaos King is one of his offshoots and Knull originated from the abyss Oblivion embodies.
390* InTheHood: Oblivion's features are hidden by a large hood, with [[RedEyesTakeWarning glowing red eyes]] peaking out from the shadows.
391* TimeAbyss: Even by the standards of the others, Oblivion is exceedingly old, being the void that predated creation.
392[[/folder]]
393
394[[folder:The Phoenix]]
395!!Phoenix Force
396[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/phoenix_force.jpg]]
397 [[caption-width-right:350:I am fire and life incarnate! Now and forever - I am Phoenix!]]
398A cosmic firebird embodying creation and destruction, the Phoenix -- more commonly known as the Phoenix Force -- selects a host to serve as its avatar, and is a recurring ally and enemy of the ComicBook/XMen.
399----
400* AnimalisticAbomination: The Phoenix resembles a bird of prey made of flames, but is a cosmic entity embodying both creation and destruction.
401* AnimalBattleAura: It often manifests as an avian aura of flames surrounding its host.
402* BigBad: It is the primary antagonist of ''ComicBook/TheDarkPhoenixSaga'', ''ComicBook/AvengersVsXMen'', ''ComicBook/PhoenixResurrection'', and the ''Enter the Phoenix'' arc of ''[[ComicBook/TheAvengersJasonAaron The Avengers]]'' - though in ''Avengers vs X-Men'', it didn't actually mean any harm (nor, arguably in ''Enter the Phoenix'', though it was absolutely screwing with everyone involved).
403* BloodKnight: While it also embodies creation Phoenix is noted to relish destruction and its hosts often have to struggle to avoid becoming Dark Phoenixes.
404* BlueAndOrangeMorality: In its native state, the Phoenix isn't malicious, just a bit weird and focused on its cosmic function. The problems tend to begin when it starts getting in touch with humanity.
405* CosmicRetcon: At the height of its power, the Phoenix can wipe out entire timelines.
406* DealWithTheDevil: In a surprisingly honest moment, when it offered Jean its power, it did take the time to warn her of the risks (such as going insane and being forever tied to it), even openly calling the arrangement a deal with the Devil.
407* DestroyerDeity: A pure platonic personification of Creation and Destruction.
408* TheDreaded: The Shi'ar once worshipped the Phoenix as Phal'kon, but after its avatar Rook'shir went Dark Phoenix they came to fear and despise it. After "Jean Grey" went Dark Phoenix and ate a star, the Shi'ar decided to wipe out her bloodline and even put Jean's time-displaced younger self on trial.
409* ElementalMotifs: Fire. It gives warmth and life and light, but always burns, and is dangerous if not handled carefully.
410* EnergyBeings: The Phoenix is comprised completely of cosmic flames, making it resemble a bird-shaped star.
411* EnigmaticEmpoweringEntity: While capable of acting on its own, the Phoenix Force tends to select a host to act as its avatar, indwelling them and channeling its power through them.
412* GodCouple: ''[[ComicBook/TheAvengersJasonAaron The Avengers]]'' reveals that the Phoenix, through its avatar Firehair, was in a romance with Odin Borson. [[spoiler:The Phoenix, through a manifestation of Firehair, claims that Thor was conceived as a result of this, but ''ComicBook/{{Thor|2020}}'' both acknowledges and disputes this.]] The ultimate answer is a bit of both - [[spoiler: Thor was killed moments after he was born by Laufey, and Firehair rebirthed him through Phoenix Fire (and got somewhat attached). As a result, Gaea considers them both to be his mother, though perhaps an easier analogy is that the Phoenix is his godmother]].
413* GodOfEvil: In its Dark Phoenix aspect, it is a bloodthirsty cosmic entity that revels in razing entire planets with its flames.
414* GollumMadeMeDoIt: Being possessed by a cosmic being that goes loopy when filtered through mortal emotions was a compromise from Jean being a KarmaHoudini after going drunk with power as Dark Phoenix. She's still treated as responsible, [[TheAtoner and it weighs on her everyday]], but there is some absolution in it being due to the Phoenix.
415* HasAType: Of a non-romantic variant, the Phoenix Force is noticably drawn to female hosts with red hair and psychic powers -- with [[Characters/MarvelComicsJeanGrey Jean Grey]] being the most notable example.
416* HotWings: The Phoenix possesses wings made from cosmic flames, capable of burning entire planets and even stars to nothing.
417* ImpersonationExclusiveCharacter: The Phoenix Force chose a dying Jean Grey as its host, but after the ''ComicBook/TheDarkPhoenixSaga'' it was retconned that the Jean Grey seen between ''X-Men'' #101 and ''X-Men'' #137 was actually the Phoenix Force itself having assumed Jean's appearance and identity, placing the real Jean Grey in a healing cocoon to recover from her injuries. Now, the retcon is zig-zagged a bit, leaving it ambiguous whether or not she was Jean.
418* LightIsGood: The most powerful form of the Phoenix, the White Phoenix of the Crown, dresses in a white and gold outfit. However, it rarely appears in this form.
419* LukeIAmYourFather: In the ''Enter the Phoenix'' arc of ''[[ComicBook/TheAvengersJasonAaron The Avengers]]'', the Phoenix claims to be [[spoiler:Thor Odinson's biological mother via Firehair, and that Odin lied about Gaea being Thor's mother so he'd have a reason to protect the Earth]], though ''ComicBook/{{Thor|2020}}'' both acknowledges and disputes this retcon. It turns out to be a little bit of both: [[spoiler: Gaea is Thor’s birth mother, but the Phoenix resurrected the infant Thor during a catastrophic attack from Odin’s old foe Laufey, so in a way, she’s as much responsible for Thor’s existence now as Gaea was.]]
420* ManipulativeBastard: In ''Classic X-Men'', it's said that it helped manipulate Jean's entire life, including joining the X-Men and meeting Scott, so she'd be on the space shuttle and panicked enough to call for it, and desperate enough to take its offer, all so it could prevent D'Ken futzing with the M'Kraan Crystal and wiping out reality.
421* MindHive: The Phoenix is connected to a metaphysical realm called the White Hot Room, which serves as an afterlife for its hosts.
422* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: When, in ''Excalibur'', the Phoenix realises just what it is doing by playing god on the mortal plane. The result is that it gives all of its power to ComicBook/RachelSummers, trusting her to use it more wisely.
423* OmnicidalManiac: Despite proclaiming itself "fire and life incarnate", it very easily succumbs to its destructive impulses and relishes razing whole planets and devouring stars. The original ''{{ComicBook/Excalibur}}'' run explained this as a result of having been a bit ''too'' curious about humanity, and having been corrupted by mortal impulses and desires without the proper judgement to balance it out - an explanation touched on again in ''Phoenix Resurrection'', when Jean says that they aren't good for one another.
424* OrderVersusChaos: Representing chaos on the cosmic hierarchy, though its counterpart (the Workman) points out that this isn't always necessarily bad; the Phoenix helps tear down the stagnant and sterile, helping to promote new growth.
425* ThePhoenix: As its name suggests, it takes the form of a bird of prey made from cosmic flames.
426* PhosphorEssence: When it first appears to Jean, and much later on with Taaia, it initially appears in the form of a featureless, glowing person. With Jean, as their conversation goes on, it gradually takes on more and more of her appearance.
427* SuperPoweredEvilSide: If the Phoenix's host is evil or succumbs to its destructive impulses, this will cause the host to become a Dark Phoenix, as has happened to Rook'shir and "Jean Grey",[[note]]Retconned into being the Phoenix Force itself impersonating the real Jean Grey after ''ComicBook/TheDarkPhoenixSaga''.[[/note]] and almost happened to Firehair and Fongji.
428* SymbioticPossession: The Phoenix, in its benevolent phases, functions as a SuperMode for its host. By far its favorite host is Jean Grey, to the point where for a while they were almost treated as one-in-the-same.
429[[/folder]]
430
431[[folder:The Queen of Nevers]]
432!!The Queen of Nevers
433[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/silver_surfer_vol_7_2_textless.jpg]]
434->''I am the almost-now. The yet to be. I am the Queen of Nevers.''
435
436An entity that is the embodiment of all possibilities. Once romantically involved with Eternity itself (since he represents everything that ''is'' and she represents everything that ''could be''), she had her heart stolen by the Incredulous Zed who used it to create the Impericon, a CityPlanet that seemed to defy the laws of reality. Eventually, her heart was restored by the ComicBook/SilverSurfer and Dawn Greenwood.
437
438During ''ComicBook/TheUltimates2015'', when Master Order and Lord Chaos merged into Logos and killed all of the Celestials, she saved the last Celestial and during the final battle with the First Firmament, used the last Celestial to kickstart the rebirth of the Celestials.
439
440----
441* AndShowItToYou: Her heart was ripped out and used to create an entire CityPlanet. Thankfully, since she's a cosmic entity, she can live without a heart, but it made her weaker and she would have eventually died.
442* BerserkButton: She reacts bitterly to time travelers, especially if they're part of a StableTimeLoop, as their very existence presents the certainty of a specific timeline instead of possible outcomes.
443* BigDamnHeroes: During the final fight with the First Firmament, she provides crucial assistance:
444-->"Could one single Celestial have ''survived'' Logos' cull of his kind? If protected by some ''greater force?'' Could it then become a ''seed'' of ''many?'' ''All'' things are possible. Each ''"what if"'' may become ''what is''. And could I ''fan'' that flame of becoming? This ''once?'' To help save everything? What ''if?'' ''Rise'', then, my Celestials. My ''Avatars of the Possible!'' ''Rise Anew--'' '''''The Fifth Host!'''''"
445* BlankWhiteVoid: The Never Queen usually lives in the Land of Couldn't-Be Shouldn't Be, since it's outside of the universe and therefore the only place that she can meet Eternity (and kiss). The Land of Couldn't-Be Shouldn't-Be is just a blank white void ''forever''.
446* MayDecemberRomance: She has some years on Eternity, [[spoiler:being the Fourth Cosmos and everything.]]
447* TheReveal: [[spoiler:''Defenders: Beyond'' reveals she's also the Fourth Cosmos.]]
448* TheWatcher: As the personification of What-Could-Be, she sits outside reality, watching events.
449* WhatCouldHaveBeen: She is the in-universe personification of every possibility that hasn't happened in the multiverse. She's perpetually melancholy because she's aware of all those moments lost forever.
450[[/folder]]
451
452%%[[folder:Scrier]]
453%%!!Scrier
454%%[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/scrier_cosmic_being_earth_616.png]]
455
456%%Scrier has vast cosmic powers and also claims to be a being older than the universe and the several universes that occurred before the current one. He claims that he was old when Galactus was young. Nothing he says should be taken at face value, though, because he obfuscates and lies. He was asleep for a long time before the Silver Surfer woke him, and he resumed his war against the Other.
457
458%%----
459%%[[/folder]]
460
461[[folder:Sire Hate]]
462!!Sire Hate
463[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sire_hate_28earth_61629_from_thanos_the_infinity_finale_vol_1_1_001.jpg]]
464
465Master Hate is an abstract cosmic being who embodies hatred.
466----
467* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Master Hate is an abstract cosmic being who embodies hatred.
468* EmotionControl: Master Hate can inspire and ingrain varying levels of hate into any sentient being to various effects.
469* TakenForGranite: One of the cosmic entities turned into a statue by Thanos during ComicBook/TheInfinityGauntlet.
470[[/folder]]
471
472!!Universal Functions
473[[folder:Galactus]]
474!!Galactus
475[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/8067862_amazing_spider_man_vol_5_12_fantastic_four_villains_variant_textless.jpg]]
476
477Galactus is the infamous "Devourer of Worlds" in the Marvel Universe. His powers are nearly omnipotent. He has appointed several entities as his Heralds, imbuing them with the Power Cosmic. He uses energy from the core of planets and universal sources to sustain himself.
478----
479-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsGalactus Galactus]]
480[[/folder]]
481
482[[folder:Omnimax]]
483!!Omnimax
484[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/omnimax_marvel_comics.jpg]]
485
486The Devourer of Worlds of the Sixth Cosmos.
487----
488-> See Characters/DefendersEnemies
489[[/folder]]
490
491[[folder:What-Must-Be]]
492!!What-Must-Be
493[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/what_must_be_defenders_2021_4.jpg]]
494
495The Archetypical Devourer of Worlds of the Fourth Cosmos.
496----
497-> See Characters/DefendersEnemies
498[[/folder]]
499
500[[folder:Anti-All]]
501!!Anti-All
502[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/anti_all.jpg]]
503
504The first Devourer of Worlds, a draconic personification of the Void that existed in the Third Cosmos and battled Lifebringer One for the fate of the nascent Multiverse.
505----
506-> See Characters/DefendersEnemies
507[[/folder]]
508
509[[folder:Breaker of Worlds/Breaker-Apart]]
510!!Breaker of Worlds/Breaker-Apart
511[[quoteright:256:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/index_290.jpg]]
512
513A potential future Devourer of Worlds for the Eighth Cosmos, the Breaker of Worlds is the result of The One-Below-All taking control of ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk.
514----
515-> See Characters/MarvelComicsBruceBanner
516[[/folder]]
517
518!!Personifications of the Previous Cosmoi
519
520[[folder:Shared Tropes]]
521* EldritchLocation: Earlier in the line, their laws of physics become less defined, with the inhabitants being nascent incarnations of character archetypes.
522* GeniusLoci: They were the embodiments and consciousnesses of the multiverses that existed before the current one.
523* LegacyCharacter: They were each the Eternity of their time, before passing on the title to a successor after the existence's time came to an end.
524[[/folder]]
525
526[[folder:The First Firmament]]
527!!The First Firmament
528!!!Notable aliases: The One Who is One and More
529[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/first_firmament_first_cosmos_from_ultimates_2_vol_2_6_001.jpg]]
530
531The original version of Eternity, the First Firmament is the first universe to ever exist. Lonely, it created the Aspirants and first Celestials so it wouldn't be alone. Unfortunately for the First Cosmos, said Celestials had different ideas and war occurred that broke the first universe and gave birth to the next. Unfortunately for everyone the First Firmament was NotQuiteDead and wants to reclaim its position as [[GeniusLoci embodiment of everything]] by force.
532----
533* AbusivePrecursors: It was the creator of the first Celestials and ultimately the source of all existence. While the First Firmament may not have started as this, it certainly is now [[OmnicidalManiac considering it wants to kill everyone]].
534* ControlFreak: It despises the Celestials for creating against its wishes, and everything else for not being in power anymore.
535* TheCorrupter: While it has Eternity imprisoned, it leaches life, love and joy from the universe, helping to cause the events of ''Civil War II'' and ''Secret Empire''. It finds this funny.
536* DemiurgeArchetype: An omnipotent cosmic being and source of the multiversal cycle that created a race of less-but-still-ludicrously-powerful servants, a faction of whom rebelled, leading to a cosmic civil war? Yeah, this would be a case of GodIsEvil if we didn't know the One Above All existed and was [[GodIsGood benevolent]].
537* EasilyForgiven: At the end of ''Ultimates'', he's confronted by his successors, and taken off to see if they can heal his mental wounds. After all, the One Above All's only weapon is love.
538* HerosEvilPredecessor: The ''original'' embodiment of the universe, long before Eternity. Unlike its successors, the First Firmament doesn't give a damn about the beings in it. However [[PlayedWith its played with]] in that it only became evil ''after'' being supplanted.
539* LaserGuidedKarma: It ends up wrapped up in the very chains he bound Eternity in, because the Fifth Cosmos thought the irony would be a nice touch.
540* PlaceBeforeTime: It ''[[GeniusLoci is]]'' the universe before any other, predating the Sixth Cosmos of ComicBook/{{Galactus}} by a long mile.
541* OmnicidalManiac: Its goal is to become the only existence, which would result in the destruction of everything except for itself and its loyal Aspirants.
542* SealedEvilInACan: After its defeat the First Firmament is locked away and imprisoned by its successors.
543* TimeAbyss: While all [[CosmicEntity cosmic entities]] are this, the First Firmament stands out even compared to them by being the first universe to ever exist, several iterations before the current reality. Barring [[TopGod The One Above All]], it is a contender for the title of "oldest being in Marvel Comics".
544[[/folder]]
545
546[[folder:Second Cosmos]]
547[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/second_cosmos_28multiverse29_from_ultimates_2_vol_2_6_001.jpg]]
548
549The second multiverse, created as a result of the near destruction of the First Firmament. It created the Omega Force.
550----
551* ConstantlyCurious: The Second Cosmos was always eager to experience the new. In the end, it killed itself just to see what that was like.
552* EldritchLocation: The Second Eternity was a roiling cauldron of raw possibility, without any shape or cohesion. The Celestials created the Beyonders just to hammer out some sense of sanity into it.
553[[/folder]]
554
555[[folder:Third Cosmos]]
556[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/third_cosmos_28multiverse29_from_ultimates_2_vol_2_6_001.jpg]]
557
558The third multiverse, and proof that what happened with the second wasn't some fluke, but a cycle. This gave her her title, "the Continuator".
559----
560* EldritchLocation: Time and Space are so nascent there as to be indistinct. Lifebringer One and the Anti-All may be cosmic in scale or relative to mortals in size.
561* GreaterScopeParagon: She is the creator of Lifebringer One, the first hero, to defend against Anti-All, the first evil ever fought.
562* TheQuietOne: When the varied Eternities meet, she doesn't say a peep.
563[[/folder]]
564
565[[folder:Fourth Cosmos]]
566[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pilgrim_sentience_of_the_fourth_cosmos_multiverse_from_defenders_vol_6_4_001jpg.jpg]]
567
568The fourth cosmos, the pilgrim and true believer. The one who journeys into mystery.
569----
570* AnthropomorphicPersonification: The inhabitants of this multiverse are less distinct people and more personifications of archetypes that would be represented by later characters.
571* EldritchLocation: Not quite as bad as the Third, but in the Fourth Cosmos, time and space are a bit less important.
572* EternalRecurrence: When the Defenders visit, it's used to illustrate the [[FleetingDemographicRule cyclical nature]] of comic book storytelling, by having heroes fight amongst themselves or against villains in regular crises.
573* TheGhost: Isn't present when the previous Eternities show up at the end of ''The Ultimates'', since he's on walkabout.
574* LegacyCharacter: Multiverse no. 4.
575* MythologyGag: Three times over. His labels of 'pilgrim' and 'true believer' are both terms Stan Lee used to address fans and readers, and the Fourth is mentioned as being on a "journey into mystery".
576* OtherworldlyAndSexuallyAmbiguous: When first mentioned in ''Ultimates'', the Fourth Cosmos is referred to as a "he". When they make an appearance in ''Defenders'', they look decidedly female (neatly serving as a mirror to the equally gender fluid Cloud).
577* WalkingTheEarth: He's walking beyond the multiverse, but apparently he will return... eventually.
578[[/folder]]
579
580[[folder:Fifth Cosmos]]
581[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fifth_cosmos_28multiverse29_from_ultimates_2_vol_1_100_001.jpg]]
582
583The Fifth, and dark, Cosmos, a maker of magic and weaver of illusions.
584----
585* ChekhovsGunman: The Fifth Cosmos was mentioned by Moridun, a wizard who'd escaped it thanks to the Maker mucking about, in ''New Avengers'' in 2016. This guy shows up in 2018.
586* DarkIsNotEvil: Despite being the Dark Cosmos, he assists the other Eternities in answering their brother's call and imprisoning the First Firmament, before taking him off for healing.
587* InTheHood: Befitting a multiverse of magic, he's decked out in a hooded cloak.
588* MagicalLand: The multiverse he represented predates science and ran solely on magic.
589* MythologyGag: His description as 'the weaver of illusions of change' alludes to a Stan Lee quote about Marvel's philosophy for continuity and the floating timeline.
590[[/folder]]
591
592[[folder:Sixth Cosmos]]
593[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sixth_cosmos_28multiverse29_from_ultimates_2_vol_1_100_001.jpg]]
594The sixth multiverse, inventor of science and builder of the Junction to Everywhere.
595----
596* ApocalypseHow: When he was dying, the Sixth Cosmos went up in mega-storms of cosmic radiation.
597* FusionDance: What was left of him merged with Galen of Taa, last survivor of Taa and indeed the entire sixth iteration of the multiverse, eventually producing Galactus.
598%%* GadgeteerGenius: Going by the titles he's given.
599* MagicVersusScience: Immediately following the cosmos that runs on magic is one that introduces science. The inhabitants glimpsed near its collapse is a utopic civilization of super science, in the middle of defending against their version of [[PlanetEater Galactus]], Omnimax, who is a reincarnation of a sorcerer from the previous cosmos.
600* MythologyGag: His description as the creator of the Junction to Anywhere refers to a quote by Reed Richards about the Negative Zone on one of his first trips there.
601* TheQuietOne: Same as the Third, he doesn't say a word during his appearance in ''The Ultimates''.
602[[/folder]]
603
604!!Children of Eternity
605[[folder:Empathy]]
606!!Empathy
607
608One of the Seven Friendless, child of Eternity, and probably the embodiment of, well, empathy.
609----
610* TheGhost: Is never seen, only mentioned.
611[[/folder]]
612
613%%[[folder:Enmity]]
614%%!!Enmity
615%%One of the Seven Friendless, daughter of Eternity, and the embodiment of deep-rooted hatred.
616%%[[/folder]]
617
618[[folder:Entropy]]
619!!Entropy
620[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/entropy_28earth_61629_from_captain_marvel_vol_5_5_001.jpg]]
621
622One of the children of Eternity and the embodiment of the Big Freeze.
623----
624%%* CelestialBody: Fitting for the son of Eternity.
625* GrandTheftMe: Once possessed the supervillain Blizzard.
626* SuicidalCosmicTemperTantrum: He wanted to destroy his father, Eternity, and thus destroy all of creation. And, in fact, with the help of Genis-Vell, he ''did''. But then he began to regret it and, with the help of Rick Jones and Genis-Vell, recreated the universe.
627[[/folder]]
628
629[[folder:Eon]]
630!!Eon
631[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eon_28earth_61629_from_thanos_the_infinity_finale_vol_1_1_001.jpg]]
632
633An entity that was the embodiment of time. It lived in it's own pocket universe, the Eonverse, and appointed various Protectors of the Universe like [[Characters/MarvelComicsMarvels Mar-Vell]] and ComicBook/{{Quasar}}. Eon was the one who granted the original Mar-Vell with "cosmic awareness" and designed the Quantum Bands that were worn by both Mar-Vell and Quasar.
634
635Eon was killed (somehow) by Maelstrom, but his role was taken over by his daughter Epoch.
636----
637* GreaterScopeParagon: As the one who gave Mar-Vell cosmic awareness (and presumably everyone else who has it), and the designer of the Quantum Bands.
638* StarfishAliens: While the other Abstract entities have humanoid forms, Eon looks like a tree stump with a face, a separate eye, and ''hair''.
639[[/folder]]
640
641[[folder:Epiphany]]
642!!Epiphany
643
644One of the Seven Friendless, daughter of Eternity, and the embodiment of sudden flashes of insight.
645----
646* ReallyGetsAround: She slept with Rick Jones and Genis-Vell.
647[[/folder]]
648
649%%[[folder:Epoch]]
650%%!!Epoch
651%%[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/epoch_28earth_61629_from_fantastic_four_vol_1_544_0001.jpg]]
652%%The daughter of Eon and thus the granddaughter of Eternity, Epoch took over Eon's role in sponsoring various Protectors of the Universe.
653%%----
654%%[[/folder]]
655
656[[folder:Eulogy]]
657!!Eulogy
658[[quoteright:320:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eulogy.jpg]]
659
660One of the Seven Friendless, son of Eternity, and probably the embodiment of the ending things and giving a eulogy.
661----
662* CelestialBody: Fitting for a child of Eternity.
663* PalsWithJesus: Eulogy, using the name "Al," actually worked at Rick Jones' comic book shop for a time without anyone knowing who he actually was. He just liked working there.
664[[/folder]]
665
666%%[[folder:Expediency]]
667%%!!Expediency
668%%One of the Seven Friendless, son of Eternity, and the embodiment of making things happen quickly.
669%%[[/folder]]
670
671[[folder:Explosion]]
672!!Explosion
673[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/explosion_28earth_61629_from_starbrand_26_nightmask_vol_1_4_001.png]]
674
675One of the children of Eternity and the embodiment of the Big Bang.
676----
677* GrandTheftMe: Once possessed the supervillain Nitro.
678[[/folder]]
679
680[[folder:Gravitation]]
681!!Gravitation
682[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gravitation_28earth_61629_from_starbrand_26_nightmask_vol_1_4_001.png]]
683
684One of the children of Eternity and the embodiment of the Big Crunch.
685----
686* GrandTheftMe: Once possessed the supervillain Graviton.
687[[/folder]]
688
689[[folder:Now and Then]]
690!!Now and Then
691[[quoteright:343:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/now_and_then.JPG]]
692
693Now and Then were the twin children of Eternity who dwelled in the House of Ideas. Then embodies the past, while Now embodies the present. They struck a deal with Loki so that he could have his heart's desire. They have made deals with many heroes, in fact, though none remember them.
694----
695%%* CelestialBody: Fitting for the children of Eternity.
696* CreepyTwins: Creepy twins who are ''omnipotent''.
697* DealWithTheDevil: They aren't devils or demons. In fact, their deals are very straightforward -- but they still result in unexpected consequences for the heroes.
698[[/folder]]
699
700!!Beyonders
701[[folder:The Lost One]]
702!!The Lost One
703[[quoteright:1000:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rco012_1680138304.jpg]]
704!!!'''Alter Ego:''' Cal-Horra
705!!!'''First Appearance:''' ''Avengers Beyond'' #1 (March, 2023)
706
707Scion of the Celestials, Cal-Horra was a beautiful and benevolent godlike being of the First Cosmos who created the Beyonders. The race of reality warpers soon turned against the future Lost One, stealing his powers for their own use, and imprisoning him outside the Omniverse. He eventually escaped and proceeded to hunt down the Beyonders one-by-one.
708----
709* AchillesHeel: The Celestials took precautions against Cal-Horra to make it so he would never become a serious threat to them or their experiments. He has built-in vulnerabilities to the very biology of a Celestial, so a fist coated in Celestial blood can harm him with a punch he would have otherwise laughed off. His incredible senses have programmed blindspots when observing Celestial technology, so anything cloaked with the same would be utterly invisible to him even if it could be parsed through by those "weaker" than he is.
710* AlwaysABiggerFish: The Celestials created him to have power surpassing their own, though with built-in limitations to never threaten them. He in turn created the Beyonders, who were capable of collectively stealing his power and becoming the bigger fish to everything else in the multiverse [[LoopholeAbuse since they didn't have this restriction]]. Once he gets what he wants on Earth 616 he leaves noting that this is true of everything; that no matter how big the cosmic fish, there's always a bigger cosmos somewhere.
711* EvilMakesYouUgly: For as much power as he regains, for as many Beyonders as he kills, he never bothers to use any of his returned might to restore his once beautiful face as that's time he can spend to do the first two things. The Avengers getting the better of him and making him pause - if only for a moment - gives him enough lucidity to [[spoiler:finally do that.]]
712* TheJuggernaut: Cal-Horra's body is actually a physical construct he manifested to interact with the material plane. He describes it as "perfect", capable of swimming in suns, soaring through black holes, and crushing moons with its fists. So even robbed of most of his cosmic capabilities, he can still endure immense amounts of punishment with this leftover vessel alone.
713* NoNonsenseNemesis: As he can weather almost any attack thrown at him, his typical strategy when dealing with Beyonders is to walk up to, fly towards, or teleport in front of them before stabbing them to death with rather basic weapons conceptually attuned to kill them.
714* RevengeBeforeReason: The prospect of getting to murder and absorb [[spoiler:five]] Beyonders is enough to lure him to Earth and what was, in hindsight, a fairly obvious trap that would've stuck him there.
715* RummageSaleReject: His outfit for most of ''Avengers Beyond'' is a hodgepodge of salvaged armor pieces he's slapped on to preserve his modesty and hide his face.
716* SealedEvilInACan: What happened to him during the time of the First Cosmos, and what the Beyonder almost does to him again in ''Avengers Beyond''.
717* SmashCut: In a dark riff on the core gimmick of ''ComicBook/AllOutAvengers'' each issue of ''Avengers Beyond'' after he arrives on Earth begins with him having advanced his plans offscreen to the confusion of Earth's Mightiest Heroes.
718* UnderestimatingBadassery: Either couldn't understand why the Beyonders would try to overthrow their creator, or was too arrogant to recognize their coup for the threat that it was.
719[[/folder]]
720
721[[folder:Beyonder]]
722!!Beyonder
723[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/4172484_newav2013029cov_bc2f7.jpg]]
724!!! '''Alter Ego:''' Kosmos
725!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Frank, Kurami
726!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Secret Wars'' #1 (May 1984)
727
728The Beyonder is an immensely powerful extradimensional entity of disputed origin. The Beyonder is the beyond-all and end-all of all things, striven on occasion to be both mankind's greatest savior and threat, in a quest to better understand human nature.
729----
730* AlwaysABiggerFish:
731** It's a toss-up whether he's more powerful than the Phoenix or vice-versa. Generally, he's got the edge; a fully empowered Phoenix ''could'' take him, but it'd cause a lot of damage. In the White Hot Room, the Phoenix has the advantage.
732** ''ComicBook/TheAvengersJonathanHickman'' establishes that he is merely a child unit dispatched by the even stronger Beyonders, effectively his bosses / parents.
733* AmbiguousSituation: ''New Avengers: Illuminati'' claims he's a mutant-Inhuman hybrid... possibly. But Black Bolt claims he can't remember anything about this, and there's just enough wiggle room to suggest the Beyonder was making this all up to distract them. ''Maybe.''
734* BlueAndOrangeMorality: The Beyonder is utterly, well, ''beyond'' any conception of human morality, so his attempts to fit into human society do not exactly go swimmingly. His behaviour ranges from apparently sociopathic and thoughtless to surprisingly benevolent and caring, but that is only because everything in this world is so alien to him. Part of his CharacterDevelopment involves him gaining a more acceptable view of morality through his interactions with civilians and superheroes alike, though he still makes mistakes and never lets go of his godly detachment.
735* BrokenRecord: While attempting to live as a human, he constantly babbles about seeking understanding and experience. His unnatural behaviour quickly tips people off that he is not of this world.
736* CatchPhrase: Usually introduces himself with "I am from the Beyond."
737* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Due to the circumstances of his birth, he admits he'll ''always'' be a little bit broken, one way or another.
738* ComicBookFantasyCasting: Intentionally or not, his primary form bears some resemblance to Music/MichaelJackson.
739* ConstantlyCurious: He is always asking questions and seeking to discover new experiences.
740* ContinuitySnarl: In ''New Avengers'' vol 3 issue 33 Doctor Doom talks about how the Beyonders cannot travel through time, however the Beyonder has been seen time traveling several times, notably in ''ComicBook/SecretWarsII'' where he transports Iron Fist and Power Man through time.
741* CosmicEntity: Well, barring that one time he was an Earthling and that other time he was an Inhuman-Mutant, he is definitely this.
742* ADayInTheLimelight: Though less acclaimed than the original ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'', ''ComicBook/SecretWarsII'' greatly expanded on the Beyonder's character, making him the focal protagonist of the story, as opposed to the featureless GenericDoomsdayVillain he was previously.
743* DeathIsCheap: As Kosmos, he (she) got drained of her energy and killed by the Promenials during ''Annihilation''. But apparently it didn't take.
744* DependingOnTheWriter:
745** His attitude through ''Secret Wars II'', a consequence of multiple writers in different titles. For example, sometimes he speaks semi-casual and colloquial, sometimes with SpockSpeak.
746** The Inhuman-Mutant hybrid Beyonder seen in ''ComicBook/TheIlluminati'' is much weaker than any other version seen, but even this wimpier interpretation is enormously powerful.
747* DimensionLord: Early appearances had him as ruler of a vast dimension called the Beyond Realm.
748* DoingInTheWizard: ''New Avengers: Illuminati'' drastically retconned his origin, making it significantly more mundane. Instead of an extradimensional cosmic being, he's portrayed as an insane Inhuman-Mutant hybrid from Earth who deluded himself into thinking he was from the Beyond Realm. He still possesses reality warping powers, but nerfed to a much more manageable level.
749* FishOutOfWater: His complete inability to fit into human society in ''Secret Wars II'' creates both drama and comedy.
750* ForcedTransformation: As an extradimensional being, he has no fixed appearance, though he most commonly takes the form of a muscular man in a white suit. He has also been known to mimic the forms of others, namely that of Molecule Man.
751* AFormYouAreFamiliarWith: Either a formless thing, or possibly looking like a Grey in power armor, he takes on the jheri-curl disco suit to make people more relaxed. ... results may be mixed.
752* GenderBender: Of course, he can effortlessly change his gender, along with every other part of himself, on a whim.
753* GenericDoomsdayVillain: Not as bad as other examples, but his first appearance in ''Secret Wars'' didn't give him much motivation for pitting the heroes and villains against each other, except to sate his curiosity. Subsequent appearances made him much more three-dimensional (ironically).
754* GeniusLoci: Originally (before all the subsequent retcons), he was supposed to be the living embodiment of an entire alternate universe -- albeit, apparently one with nothing in it except ''him.'' When a freak accident created a pinhole opening to the main Marvel Universe, he became fascinated by the sight of things that were not part of himself, and traveled there to investigate (leaving his own world completely empty). [[HilarityEnsues Hilarity Ensued.]] Later writers have retconned away this origin in many different ways, but it does still seem to be what he ''believed'' himself to be, at the time.
755* GreatGazoo: He's a reality-warping cosmic trickster who pops into the Marvel Universe to mess with the heroes' lives. Moreso in the second ''Heroes Reborn'', where he's the Mr. Mxyzptlk to Hyperion's Superman
756* HeroKiller: He kills the New Mutants... and brings them back moments later. But they were understandably ''massively'' screwed up by the experience.
757* HotInHumanForm: While we may never see his "true form", the first on-panel form he takes is an ugly composite of various Marvel heroes, before he transforms into a very handsome human. He's handsome enough to almost sway ComicBook/{{Dazzler}} into his arms as she acknowledges his beauty, but he finds that he cannot force her to love him on looks and grand gestures alone.
758* HumanityEnsues: He willingly transforms himself into an ordinary human being in ''Secret Wars II'', as part of his self-imposed mission for "understanding".
759* ImmortalImmaturity: Beyonder is an immortal capital-g God in every sense of the word, but has the mental capacities of a prepubescent child, and even that may be too generous a comparison. He demonstrates almost no understanding of the world beyond his insulated bubble, forcing other characters to educate him on the barest basics. Justified since, at the time of ''Secret Wars'' and ''Secret Wars II'' he actually ''is'' a child, by his kind's point of view.
760* LetsYouAndHimFight: His debut saw him abduct many heroes and villains from the Marvel Universe to a patchwork planet and had them battle it out.
761* LightIsNotGood: He wears a bright white suit and, while not irredeemably evil either, his appearances invariably spell bad news for everyone else.
762* LiteralMinded:
763** During ''Uncanny X-Men'' #196, the Beyonder is taught manners. "Ya want something, ya don't grab for it, ya ask nice, say please, say thank you, that sort of thing." How does the Beyonder ask for his food? "Please, say thank you, that sort of thing."
764** His solution to Power Man telling him that lack of money is the root of the world's problems was to turn an entire skyscraper into gold, which quickly collapses and proves unusable for the economy. Similarly, he decides to erase the concept of death from the universe by literally poisoning the Grim Reaper herself, but quickly comes to regret the decision.
765* LivingAphrodisiac: He has a brief fling with a socialite model. Beyonder manages to please her so well that she ''kills herself via overdose'' the moment he leaves her. Don't worry, [[DeathIsCheap he revives her]]... only to leave her again.
766* MarsNeedsWomen: He becomes very fixated on the mutant singer/superhero Dazzler and tries to win her heart, but his inability to relate to her on a personal level without showing her grand superficial gestures (such as giving her half his power, [[MySkullRunnethOver which almost breaks her mind completely]]) only turns her away.
767* MixAndMatchMan: When he first appears on Earth in ''Secret Wars II'', he takes the form of a strange homunculus of various Marvel characters such as Iron Man, Mr. Fantastic, Storm, etc. The justification for taking this bizarre form is that the Marvel heroes were the first beings (besides himself) that he ever encountered, so he naturally assumed that everyone on Earth looked like them.
768* MorphicResonance: When Deadpool is accidentally teleported into the Beyond in ''Deadpool's Secret Secret Wars'' and sees the Beyonder in his true form -- a child-sized version of the Beyonders from the 2015 ''ComicBook/{{Secret Wars|2015}}'' -- the entity still has his trademark Jheri curls.
769* MultipleChoicePast: Infamously so. Almost every comic to star the Beyonder has given him a completely different origin and generally portrayed his personality and powers inconsistently. Reconciling some of these origins is nearly impossible, leading many fans to mentally separate his appearances into loosely-defined but distinct eras.
770** In the original ''Secret Wars'', the Beyonder is established as a cosmic entity from another dimension, the Beyond Realm. He was said to be the absolute supreme ruler of this realm, a vast void which utterly dwarfs the entire Marvel multiverse, enough to make it look like a droplet of water in comparison. In ''Secret Wars II'', he suddenly gains a desire to be human and spontaneously changes himself into one.
771** In the pages of ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'', he was revealed to be the result of a failed Cosmic Cube experiment created by the Beyonders, his unseen AbusivePrecursors. He changes back into a Cosmic Cube and eventually evolves into Kosmos.
772** The most radical retcon occurs in ''New Avengers: Illuminati''. Charles Xavier scans Beyonder's brain and discovers that he is actually an insane mutated Inhuman from the kingdom of Attilan who deluded himself into believing he was a cosmic entity.
773** ''Secret Wars (2015)'' follows the thread of our MJ-lookin' Beyonder being a creation of the Beyonders, though it instead states that he is in fact one of them, albeit a petulant child by their standards. We also finally see that his true form (or the closest thing to it) is a cute little dark-skinned imp with his trademark Jheri curls!
774** ''Defenders: Beyond'' tries trying most of these together; he ''is'' a child Beyonder, from Beyond. His Cosmic Cube form was his larval state, accidentally woken up early by Molecule Man's creation, forcing him to "speed run" his various forms in order to reach a semblance of maturity.
775* NobodyPoops: Infamously averted; at one point after becoming human, Beyonder feels a strange pressure between his legs, and it falls to poor Spider-Man to ''show him how to poop''.
776* NormalFishInATinyPond: His reason given for his odd behavior. He's a being from "Beyond". Normal reality is too small and cramped for him.
777* NoSocialSkills: As a human in ''Secret Wars II'', he has none whatsoever, not helped by him being breathtakingly LiteralMinded. He also has to have very basic concepts explained to him constantly.
778* TheOmnipotent: He has wavered from Type 1 to Type 5 and everything in between, but he gives one hell of a good rant about how utterly insignificant everything else in the cosmos is compared to his might:
779-->''"Everything is what I '''say''' it is! If I decide that granite is squeezably soft, it '''is'''! If I decide that cows have wings, they '''do'''! To put it another way, cows do not have wings because I don't want them to! My imagination and reality are virtually '''indistinguishable'''! All existence, except me, might as well be a figment of my imagination! Maybe it is! I might have just dreamed all this up, including wingless cows! But then, the whole point is that it makes '''no difference!'''"''
780* RealityWarper: For all of his many conflicting origins, he is consistently portrayed as an immensely powerful entity capable of altering reality to his whims.
781* {{Retcon}}: For all his incredible power, he's a punching bag for bizarre retcons. See ContinuitySnarl above.
782* RogueDrone: Most of the other Beyonders are pretty uniform. ''The'' Beyonder, thanks to his time with Earth's heroes, has a bit more understanding of humans and how they work. If he's really putting in the effort, he tries to talk more casual to reassure folks.
783* SpellMyNameWithAThe: To distinguish him from all the other Beyonders, who have no names of their own.
784* TheUnseen: Despite his instigating role in dragging everyone to Battleworld, he goes unseen in the original ''Secret Wars'' storyline. His most iconic design, seen above, comes from the sequel.
785* VictoryIsBoring: At one point in ''Secret Wars II'', he mentally dominates the entire population of Earth to bow before him. This bores him very quickly.
786* WhatIsThisThingYouCallLove: His stint of living on Earth in ''ComicBook/SecretWarsII'' to understand the human experience saw him learn new emotions such as love and pain. Beyonder tries to make the heroine Dazzler fall in love with him, but realizes he can't win her love fairly, with no mind control tricks. This drives him mad.
787* TheWorfEffect: His specialty is dishing out beatings to other cosmic beings. In his earlier appearances, he was far and away one of the mightiest beings in the entire setting, if not '''the''' strongest, leaving the other entities scared out of their wits. Effortlessly thrashing Galactus in his debut was merely the tip of the iceberg. He has since killed Death herself and sparred with the highest abstract beings of the multiverse.
788[[/folder]]
789
790%%[[folder:Kubik]]
791%%!!Kubik
792%%[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/105443_32557_kubik.jpg]]
793
794%%!!! '''Alter Ego:'''
795%%!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' Cosmic Cube
796%%!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''Tales of Suspense'' #79 (July, 1966) [[note]]As Cosmic Cube[[/note]]; ''Captain America Annual'' #7 (October, 1983) [[note]]As Kubik[[/note]]
797
798%%Kubik is a sentient Cosmic Cube, like the Shaper of Worlds and Kosmos (the former Beyonder). He has power on a cosmic scale, and is exploring the universe and his role in it.
799%%----
800%%[[/folder]]
801
802[[folder:Shaper of Worlds]]
803!!Shaper of Worlds
804[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/3243523_shaper.jpg]]
805
806!!! '''Notable Aliases:''' The Skrullian Cube
807!!! '''First Appearance:''' ''The Incredible Hulk'' Vol. 1, #155
808
809A powerful being that developed from a Skrull Cosmic Cube. He helped tutor Kubik, another sentient Cube, into maturity.
810----
811* AntiVillain: Not evil, as such, but does evil work for others.
812* BlueAndOrangeMorality: He has a compulsion to create new realities, but having no creativity has to rely on the thoughts and dreams of others as a template. He doesn't care a wit about what those dreams are, once having made a Nazi utopia in the microverse from the mind of an old Nazi sympathizer.
813* ContrivedCoincidence: When he lost the ability to absorb dreams, Shaper was seeking a type of radiation that would restore his abilities. Three guesses just who gave off the unique radiation signature that worked.
814* CreativeSterility: He has no imagination of his own, so he depends upon other beings' ideas to manipulate reality. He can only create by copying the desires of others.
815* DealWithTheDevil: Actually ComicBook/TheJoker, but close enough.
816* HollywoodCyborg: Crossed with AFormYouAreComfortableWith. He isn't ''really'' a pointy-eared humanoid with tractor treads for legs, but he chose that form based on the old Skrull Emperor who wielded him back when he was a mere Cosmic Cube.
817* RealityWarper: The Shaper of Worlds generates illusions that typically cannot be distinguished from reality. Its initial reach is limited to a few meters, but increases when used. He can transform an entire planet in 21 hours. "Illusions" last for four years, unless the Shaper chooses to maintain them.
818* TheSpock: Very composed.
819* SuperEmpowering: He unlocked the latent reality bending psychic abilities of the the human that came to be known as Glorian and took him on as an apprentice.
820[[/folder]]
821
822[[folder:Beyonders]]
823-> See [[Characters/MarvelComicsSpecies Beyonders]]
824[[/folder]]
825
826!!Others
827
828[[folder:The Dominion]]
829!!"The Dominion"
830
831A mysterious cosmic threat from outside the Multiverse.
832----
833* CoolCrown: What the limited human mind can comprehend of it is as a giant "crown above all things".
834* DeityOfHumanOrigin: Revealed in ''ComicBook/ImmortalXMen'' to be [[spoiler:the original Nathaniel Essex. Or rather, an A.I. copy that became an all-powerful machine intelligence by exploiting the efforts of Essex's [[Characters/XMenSinister Sinister clones]] to become Dominions themselves.]]
835* TheDreaded: The Beyonders, who can wipe out most of the other cosmic entities, were scared enough of the Dominion that they [[ComicBook/SecretWars2015 blew up all of reality]] as a "necessary experiment" to keep it at bay.
836* EldritchAbomination: It's some immeasurably powerful ''thing'' from beyond the Multiverse, and when the Defenders see it, they can only comprehend it as a giant crown seeming to float above five realities at once.
837* EvenMoreOmnipotent: The Beyonders initiated the Incursions as a "necessary experiment" to stop this thing. Loki also states that it makes the Black Winter look like an "angry jelly baby."
838* YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm: Blue Marvel outright says that the vision of the Dominion the One Above All is showing the Defenders, a giant crown, is the closest they can comprehend.
839[[/folder]]
840
841[[folder:The Workman]]
842!!"The Workman"
843!!!'''First Appearance:''' ''Classic X-Men'' #43 (1989)
844
845A cosmic entity who appears in the form of a construction worker, outside of space and time.
846----
847* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Admits to being one of order and entropy.
848* DidWeJustHaveTeaWithCthulhu: Well, coffee, but when Phoenix-thinking-it's-Jean has a mild breakdown he stops what he's doing to offer her reassurances.
849* AFormYouAreComfortableWith: Admits to Jeanix that his appearance is just the closest she can get to perceiving him.
850* GodlySidestep: Is he Death in another form? Is he the One Above All? Both? Neither? He never says. When Jean postulates that he's Death, who traditionally presents as female, he doesn't give an answer either way. Same decades later when asked about it by Adam Brashear, merely saying "I am as I am". The fact he mentions a schedule to keep suggests whichever entity he is, there's ''someone'' above him.
851* NoNameGiven: Whoever or whatever he is, he never actually gives any sort of name or identifier.
852* RuleOfSymbolism: His domain looks like a giant, endless construction site, with him forever building more and more.
853* YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre: The gist of his speech to the fragment of Jean in Phoenix that winds up in his site.
854
855[[/folder]]
856
857[[folder:The Gravedigger]]
858!!"The Gravedigger"
859!!!'''First Appearance:''' ''The Incredible Hulk'' vol. 1, #[=-1=]
860
861An unnerving being who appears to be a loquacious gravedigger, hiding a sinister bent.
862----
863* AllJustADream: His encounter with the Hulk in issue [=-1=]. Of course, in the Marvel universe, just because it's a dream doesn't mean it didn't happen ''anyway'', and the stuff he shows the Hulk turns out to be right.
864* AmbiguouslyRelated: Might be an aspect of the One Below All, or just someone whose face it's taken on. Or he might be his own person.
865* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: The first time he appeared to the Hulk, he mentions he used to handle "the plots 'round these parts". Since he looks eerily like Stan Lee, he could well be talking about plots as in a graveyard, or story plots.
866* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Looks like a dead ringer for Stan the Man himself. Only malevolent and creepy.
867* NoNameGiven: He never actually gives his name.
868* SinisterShades: Always wearing a pair of sunglasses. Sinister as all Hell.
869
870[[/folder]]

Top