Hubbry Logo
Infinity StonesInfinity StonesMain
Open search
Infinity Stones
Community hub
Infinity Stones
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Infinity Stones
Infinity Stones
from Wikipedia

Infinity Stones
Marvel Cinematic Universe element
The six Infinity Stones floating in space. From left to right: Time (green), Power (purple), Space (blue), Mind (yellow), Reality (red), and Soul (orange)
The six Infinity Stones. From left to right: Time, Power, Space, Mind, Reality, and Soul
First appearance
Based onInfinity Gems
by Marvel Comics
Adapted by
  • Christopher Markus
  • Stephen McFeely
GenreSuperhero fiction
In-universe information
Owners

The Infinity Stones are fictional items in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) media franchise, based on the Infinity Gems of the Marvel Comics. As expounded across several interwoven MCU multimedia titles, the six Infinity Stones are reputed to embody and control essential aspects of existence—Space, Mind, Reality, Power, Time, and Soul—thereby making them critical artifacts in the MCU.

Thanos sets out to collect all six Stones to use them to wipe out half of all life in the universe, believing that his plan will save it from extinction. In 2018, Thanos accomplishes his goal and snaps his fingers while wearing the Infinity Gauntlet containing the Stones, causing the Blip. Thanos eventually uses the Stones again to destroy them and five years later, the surviving Avengers form a plan to go back in time to collect the Stones from other time periods to undo Thanos' snap. After defeating Thanos and undoing his actions from 2018, Steve Rogers / Captain America returns the Stones to the exact moments in time that the Avengers collected them from.

Despite being destroyed, the Stones make appearances in the Multiverse Saga, including in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022) in an alternate universe where Thanos was defeated on his home planet of Titan by the Illuminati before he can collect all of the Stones. They also make appearances in several of the MCU television series on Disney+, between flashbacks in WandaVision (2021) and alternate universes in the first season of Loki (2021) and the animated series What If...? (2021–24). Scientific studies relating to the Stones have been conducted, mostly since the release of Infinity War, including one focusing on the control of matter.

Film chronology

[edit]

The Stones, with the exception of the Soul Stone, made their debuts in films leading up to Avengers: Infinity War (2018).

The Space Stone, the first Stone to appear, was featured in a post-credit scene for Thor (2011), housed within the Tesseract. The Stone / Tesseract established its significance in the MCU through the following films, Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) and The Avengers (2012). In The First Avenger, the Red Skull uses the power of the Stone to power Hydra's weaponry during World War II. In The Avengers, Loki is sent to Earth by Thanos to get the Stone from S.H.I.E.L.D. The Space Stone did not make another appearance until Phase Three, when it made a minor appearance in Thor: Ragnarok (2017) and played a major role in Captain Marvel (2019) where it is revealed that the Stone gave Carol Danvers her powers.

The Mind Stone first showed up in The Avengers, housed in a scepter given to Loki in his efforts to get the Space Stone from Earth. The Stone is shown within the scepter in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015) where it is being used on human test subjects. The Mind Stone is eventually used to give Vision life.

Thor: The Dark World (2013) introduced the Reality Stone in its liquid form known as the Aether. It temporarily infects Jane Foster before it is given to The Collector to keep it separate from the Space Stone.

The Power and Time Stones made their debuts in Guardians of the Galaxy (2014) and Doctor Strange (2016) respectively. Ronan the Accuser seeks out the Power Stone for Thanos, but he is defeated by the Guardians of the Galaxy, who entrust the Stone with the Nova Corps. Stephen Strange finds the Eye of Agamotto, which houses the Time Stone, and uses it to save Earth from the demon Dormammu.

The Soul Stone was the last Stone to make an appearance, first showing up in Infinity War when Thanos collects the Stone on Vormir after sacrificing Gamora.

Fictional history

[edit]

The stories of the Stones in the MCU take place in the Earth-616 universe.[a] The fictional information below includes events that happened with the Stones from more than one Earth-616 timeline, as well as events that happened with them in multiple other universes.

List of Infinity Stones
Name Ability Color Gauntlet location Container First appearance
Space Stone Create portals to teleport; telekinesis[1] Blue Middle finger Tesseract Thor
Mind Stone Control minds, enhance the user's intelligence, and create new life[1] Yellow Back of hand Loki's scepter (initially)
Vision's forehead
The Avengers
Reality Stone Alter reality[1] Red Ring finger Aether Thor: The Dark World
Power Stone Manipulate energy; increased strength[1] Purple Index finger Orb Guardians of the Galaxy
Time Stone Control and manipulate time[1] Green Thumb Eye of Agamotto Doctor Strange
Soul Stone Manipulate the soul of a person[2] Orange Little finger Avengers: Infinity War

Creation

[edit]

In 2014, the Collector explains that the Infinity Stones are the remnants of six singularities that existed before the Big Bang, which were compressed into Stones by cosmic entities after the universe began and which were dispersed throughout the cosmos.[3][4] Four years later, it is further explained by Wong and Stephen Strange that each Infinity Stone embodies and controls an essential aspect of existence.[5]

Events before Infinity War

[edit]

Space Stone

[edit]

At some point in time, the Tesseract, which contains the Space Stone, came into the possession of Odin, who hid it on Earth in the Norwegian village of Tønsberg, whose inhabitants were Asgardian worshippers. In 1942, during World War II, Johann Schmidt steals the Tesseract from a church in Tønsberg and uses it to power Hydra's weaponry. During Steve Rogers's final fight against Schmidt in 1943,[6] the Tesseract transports the latter to the planet Vormir.[5] Afterwards, the Tesseract falls into the Arctic Ocean, where it is later recovered by Howard Stark and taken to a S.H.I.E.L.D. secret base.[6]

In 1989, Dr. Wendy Lawson unsuccessfully tries to use the Tesseract to unlock light-speed travel to help the Skrulls find a new home. However, her experiments result in Carol Danvers being granted superhuman strength, flight, and the ability to generate energy blasts. In 1995, Danvers eventually recovers the Tesseract and returns the object to S.H.I.E.L.D., but it is temporarily swallowed by a Flerken named Goose, who later vomits it out on Nick Fury's desk.[7]

In 2011, Fury shows the Tesseract to Dr. Erik Selvig and recruits him to work with it. In 2012, the Tesseract suddenly opens a portal allowing for Loki to come through.[8][9] Loki steals the Tesseract and later opens a wormhole, using it to transport the Chitauri army to New York City in an attempt to conquer Earth. After the Avengers repel the invasion, Thor returns the Tesseract to Asgard for safekeeping in Odin's vault, and it is used to repair the Bifrost.[9][10] In 2018, Loki takes the Tesseract from the vault as they escape the destruction of Asgard (Ragnarok).[11][12]

Mind Stone

[edit]

The Stone is originally housed in a scepter in the possession of Thanos and the Other. It is lent to Loki in 2012 to help locate the Tesseract and conquer Earth with its ability to control people's minds and project energy blasts.[9][13] After Loki's defeat, the scepter is handed over to S.H.I.E.L.D., after which it falls into the hands of secret Hydra leader Baron Wolfgang von Strucker. He uses it to experiment on people, including siblings Pietro and Wanda Maximoff; they are the only surviving subjects of Strucker's experiments.[14][15] Von Strucker's experiments cause Pietro to gain superhuman abilities and amplify Wanda's powers.[15][16] In 2015, Strucker's base is attacked by the Avengers, who take back the scepter. The Avengers discover that it contains the Mind Stone, which itself contains an artificial intelligence. The AI grants sentience to the computer program Ultron, who steals the scepter and removes the Stone to create a newly upgraded body. The Avengers steal the Mind Stone–infused body from Ultron and upload the A.I. J.A.R.V.I.S. into it, giving birth to the android Vision. Afterwards, the Mind Stone is embedded in Vision's forehead.[10][13][15]

Reality Stone

[edit]

Eons ago, Malekith attempted to use the Reality Stone, appearing in its fluid-like weapon state called the Aether, to destroy the Nine Realms. His plan was to return the universe to its pre-Big Bang state, only to be thwarted by Bor, who had it hidden on Earth. In 2013, Jane Foster becomes infected by the Aether after coming across its resting place. Malekith is awakened by the Aether's release and later draws it out of her. After Malekith is defeated by Thor, Sif and Volstagg, they seal the Aether in a lantern-like container and entrust it to the Collector on the planet Knowhere to keep it separate from the Tesseract, as they consider it unwise to have multiple Infinity Stones close to each other.[10][17][18][19] The Aether, once bonded to a host, can turn anything into dark matter, as well as suck the life force out of humans and other mortals. The Aether can also disrupt the laws of physics and repel threats if it senses any.[1][17]

Power Stone

[edit]

Housed in an Orb hidden in a secret temple on the abandoned planet Morag, the Power Stone is capable of increasing the user's strength and destroying entire civilizations with a single blast. However, the Stone is too much for most mortal beings to physically handle because its power will destroy them on contact.[20][21] In 2014, Ronan the Accuser seeks the Orb for Thanos, but Peter Quill finds and steals the Orb from Morag's resting spot before Korath can. Ronan eventually steals it from the Guardians. After learning about the Power Stone, however, Ronan betrays Thanos and tries to use its destructive power to destroy the planet Xandar. During the battle to protect Xandar, by sharing the burden of the Power Stone's energy, the Guardians are able to use it to kill Ronan. It is later revealed that Peter Quill's half-Celestial physiology allowed him to withstand the Stone's power on his own for a brief time before the other Guardians joined him. They seal the Power Stone in a new Orb and entrust it to the Nova Corps on Xandar for safekeeping.[3][10]

Time Stone

[edit]

The Time Stone was found by Agamotto, Earth's first Sorcerer Supreme, who fashioned a containment device, the Eye of Agamotto, to harness its dangerous power.

In 2016, Dr. Stephen Strange discovers the Eye of Agamotto at Kamar-Taj and uses it to save the Earth from Dormammu by trapping him in a time loop until the demon abandons his plans for Earth. Strange returns the Eye of Agamotto to the Masters of the Mystic Arts' secret compound Kamar-Taj in Kathmandu, Nepal, but soon begins wearing it again.[11][22][23]

Soul Stone

[edit]

An object that has the ability to manipulate the soul and essence of a person,[2] control life and death, and contains a pocket dimension called the Soul World.[24] At some time in the past, Thanos tasks Gamora to find the Soul Stone, as there is little record of its existence compared to the other Infinity Stones. Gamora finds a map leading to where it was hidden: in a shrine on the planet Vormir, but chooses to destroy the map and not tell Thanos. She only tells Nebula of it and swears her to secrecy.[5]

The Blip

[edit]

Thanos begins his quest to collect all six Stones by decimating Xandar to obtain the Power Stone. He then tracks down the Space Stone and intercepts the Asgardian ship on its way to Earth after the destruction of Asgard.[11][25] Thanos kills half of the occupants and threatens to kill Thor as well, but Loki gives up the Tesseract to save his brother's life. Thanos proceeds to crush the Tesseract to acquire the Space Stone. He tells his children to acquire the two Stones on Earth. He then uses the Power Stone to destroy the ship as he teleports his children and himself away with the Space Stone.[5]

Thanos' four children split up, with two looking to collect the Time Stone from Doctor Strange and the other two going after Vision for the Mind Stone. In New York, Ebony Maw and Cull Obsidian attempt to steal the Time Stone from Strange, but are foiled by Tony Stark, Peter Parker, and Wong. Strange is teleported up to Maw's ship with Stark and Parker sneaking on board. In Edinburgh, Vision is injured by Proxima Midnight and Corvus Glaive in their attempts to get the Stone from his head. After the pair are defeated (with the help of Steve Rogers, Sam Wilson, and Natasha Romanoff), Vision is taken to Wakanda to have the Stone removed by Shuri, in the hope that Vision would be able to live without it.[5]

While his children are on Earth, Thanos acquires the Aether from the Collector on Knowhere and turns it back into the Reality Stone, allowing for him to repel the Guardians of the Galaxy's attacks by turning Drax to rocks, Mantis into ribbon strips, and causing Peter Quill's gun to shoot bubbles. Thanos then teleports Gamora and himself back to his ship, where he is keeping a captured Nebula. He uses the Power Stone to torture her in front of Gamora, forcing Gamora to agree to take him to Vormir to find the Soul Stone. On Vormir, they encounter the Stone keeper, the Red Skull. Thanos reluctantly sacrifices Gamora to fulfill the requirements to obtain the Soul Stone once the Red Skull explains to them that the Stone requires the sacrifice of a loved one to earn it.[26][27]

Parker and Stark kill Maw by getting him sucked out of an airlock. His ship takes Stark, Strange, and Parker to Titan, Thanos' home planet, where they run into Quill, Drax, and Mantis. Before Thanos arrives, Strange uses the Time Stone to look into future timelines and view millions of possible outcomes of their conflict, learning of only one future in which they win. Thanos arrives expecting Maw, and fights the Avengers and Guardians using the Stones. He defeats them all, leading Strange to surrender the Time Stone to prevent Thanos from killing Stark to ensure the winning future comes to pass.[5]

Thanos places the Mind Stone into the Infinity Gauntlet, which is the sixth and final Stone he needed. A surge of energy from the Stones then goes through his body.
A surge of energy goes through Thanos' body after he adds the Mind Stone into the Infinity Gauntlet, which is the final Stone he needed before the Blip.

Thanos' remaining children arrive in Wakanda where Shuri is unable to complete the removal of the Mind Stone from Vision's head before she is attacked by Glaive. Thanos arrives looking to get the Stone himself, using some of the Stones against the Avengers and Wakandans trying to fight him off. As a result of the Stone still being in Vision's head, Wanda is forced to destroy Vision and the Stone to try to prevent Thanos from getting it, only for Thanos to use the Time Stone to repair them both and collect the latter. Thanos uses all of the Stones to initiate the Blip, exterminating half of all living things in the universe, chosen at random. He is briefly transported into the Soul World and encounters a vision of a young Gamora.[28] He then teleports away with the Space Stone to the Garden. Thanos uses the Stones to destroy them to prevent further use in the future.[5][29][30]

Time heist

[edit]

After Scott Lang is freed from the Quantum Realm five years after the Blip,[31] he goes to the Avengers Compound and brings up the idea of a time heist using the Quantum Realm to collect each Stone from different points in time as changing the past does not change the future and instead creates alternate timelines. The surviving Avengers split up into teams to each focus on one Stone.[29]

Rogers, Stark, Lang, and Banner travel to an alternate 2012, where the Space, Mind, and Time Stones are all located. Stark and Lang attempt to steal the 2012 Tesseract, but the 2012 Hulk accidentally knocks Stark down and the 2012 Tesseract is taken by the 2012 Loki, who uses it to open a wormhole and escape. Rogers retrieves the scepter containing the 2012 Mind Stone, using it to render his 2012 self unconscious after he mistook him for a disguised Loki. Banner convinces the Ancient One to relinquish that timeline's Time Stone, promising to return it after they are done using it to ensure that the alternate timelines will survive. After failing to retrieve the 2012 Space Stone, Stark and Rogers travel to an alternate 1970 and take the 1970 Tesseract from Camp Lehigh, New Jersey and use a stolen briefcase to smuggle it out.[29]

Thor and Rocket travel back to Asgard in an alternate 2013 to extract the 2013 Aether from the 2013 Jane Foster. James Rhodes and Nebula travel back to Morag in an alternate 2014, subduing the 2014 Peter Quill before taking the 2014 Power Stone in its Orb. Romanoff and Clint Barton travel to Vormir in an alternate 2014, where each attempts to sacrifice themselves to allow the other to return with the Stone, ultimately ending with Romanoff sacrificing herself.[29]

All of the Stones are brought back to the present day and removed from their containers while the 2013 Aether is turned into its solid state. Stark creates a Nano Gauntlet to house the Stones, which Banner uses to undo the Blip. An alternate 2014 Thanos, having been alerted by their actions due to Nebula's cybernetic systems connecting with her 2014 self, brings his army to the future, destroying the compound and intending to use the Stones to destroy and recreate the universe out of revenge for the Blip being undone. In the ensuing battle, Stark sacrifices himself to disintegrate Thanos and his army with the Stones in the Nano Gauntlet. After Stark's funeral, Rogers returns all of the past Stones to the points in time that they were collected from.[29]

Aftermath

[edit]

Three weeks after Thanos' snap is undone, a still grieving Wanda Maximoff uses her connection with the Mind Stone to reanimate a fake Vision. Later on, Agatha Harkness shows Maximoff various points in her past, including the moment of Hydra's experimentation with the Stone on her. Maximoff learns that the exposure to the Stone tapped into and amplifyed her innate magic, as well as giving her a prophetic vision of her as the Scarlet Witch.[16][32]

Alternate versions

[edit]

Other versions of the Stones are depicted in the alternate realities of the MCU multiverse.

Loki

[edit]

An alternate 2012 Loki, who escaped during the Avengers' attempt to collect all the Infinity Stones to undo Thanos' actions,[29] has the alternate 2012 Tesseract confiscated by the Time Variance Authority (TVA). Later, Loki tries to retrieve the Tesseract only to find that it is powerless in the TVA, along with all the other Stones, in which the TVA has captured dozens of each from other timelines.[33][34] The Stones are used as paperweights in the TVA, as such the founder of the TVA and his several Kang the Conqueror variants are more powerful than the Stones.[35]

What If...?

[edit]
Ultron with all the Infinity Stones in the Disney+ animated series What If...? He places the Stones in his armor instead of needing the Infinity Gauntlet.
Ultron in What If...? stores the Stones in his armor as opposed to using the Infinity Gauntlet.

In an alternate version of World War II, Howard Stark uses the confiscated Tesseract as the power source for the Hydra Stomper.[36] In another universe, T'Challa, rather than Peter Quill, finds the Power Stone on Morag.[37] In an alternate version of 2016, Stephen Strange attempts to use the Time Stone to prevent the death of Christine Palmer, only to find her death is an absolute point in his universe, meaning no matter what he does, she's destined to die, despite his countless attempts to avert the scenario. It becomes the only Stone left in existence in his universe due to his subsequent actions.[38]

As one universe suffers from a quantum zombie outbreak, Vision discovers that his Mind Stone can be used to cure the infected. However, it is unable to cure the infected Maximoff, due to her powers coming from the Stone, prompting Vision to initially try and feed other survivors to Maximoff to keep her calm until he can properly cure her.[39] When other heroes find him, Vision accepts that his actions are wrong and he gives the Stone to the surviving heroes to take to Wakanda, sacrificing himself out of guilt. However, a zombified Thanos arrives in Wakanda, possessing the other five Infinity Stones in his Gauntlet.[40]

In another scenario, Thanos once again arrives on Earth with five Stones, only to discover that the Avengers lost to Ultron, who is in possession of Vision's vibranium body and the Mind Stone. Ultron kills Thanos and takes the Stones for himself, using them to conquer and destroy his universe. When this task is complete, Ultron attains a higher level of consciousness and uses the Stones to travel into other dimensions and duel the Watcher.[41] To stop Infinity Ultron expanding into other universes, the Watcher assembles the Guardians of the Multiverse, a team of heroes from various alternate realities, including Strange Supreme, and gifts them a weapon to destroy the Stones called the Infinity Crusher. When the Crusher fails due to it being designed to only work for the Stones in its respective universe, the heroes kill Ultron by uploading Arnim Zola's analog consciousness into his body. The Stones are nearly taken by Killmonger, but he is stopped by Zola, who tries to take the Stones for himself. Strange Supreme and the Watcher imprison them along with the Stones in a pocket dimension, frozen outside of time so that neither they nor the Stones from Ultron's universe can be a threat anymore.[42]

In Kahhori's universe, the Tesseract crashes into a lake in pre-colonial America after surviving Ragnarok and breaks, releasing unmitigated Space Stone energy into the lake's waters. As a result, a portal opens to another dimension called the Sky World, granting the inhabitants of that world incredible powers.[43] After being transported into a dying universe in the year 1602, Captain Carter, with the help of Tony Stark, discovers a device powered by the Time Stone that had been caused when Steve Rogers, while fighting Thanos during the Battle of Wakanda, accidentally hit the Time Stone with one of his shields. Using Stark's device and the Time Stone, Carter and Rogers are able to set things right, returning Rogers to his own time and ending the temporal anomaly that was tearing apart the world.[44] Among Doctor Strange Supreme's prisoners that are released by Captain Carter is a Thanos with a completed Infinity Gauntlet. However, having been freed by Carter, Killmonger (who won the battle against Zola) disintegrates Thanos with his own set of Infinity Stones. Kahhori is able to use her Tesseract-granted powers to separate Killmonger from his Infinity Armor and teleport him away, allowing Carter to take the Infinity Stones for herself. Carter is able to wield the Infinity Stones against Strange alongside Hela's crown and the weapons of some of the freed prisoners. By punching Strange with the Infinity Stones, Carter manages to bring him back to his senses temporarily.[45]

In the last two episodes of season three, another set of Infinity Stones is seen wielded by an alternate version of Infinity Ultron, who had succeeded in destroying all life in his universe, but was left with no purpose. Carter requests for his help to rescue the Watcher before she is captured by the Eminence. Kahhori, Byrdie, and Storm later do the same, and Infinity Ultron agrees to help rescue Carter and the Watcher. During the battle against the Eminence, Incarnate, and Executioner, he sacrifices himself to allow the others to escape.

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness

[edit]

On Earth-838, the Illuminati fight against Thanos on Titan who was in possession of five Infinity Stones. They kill him, leaving the gauntlet and the Stones in their responsibility.[46]

Deadpool & Wolverine

[edit]

Two variants of the Reality and Time Stones are shown to be embedded in a sling ring Cassandra Nova had taken from an unidentified variant of Stephen Strange. This allows her to open a portal from the Void to Earth-10005 and allow Deadpool and Wolverine to return to it. She later uses it to send the Deadpool Corps to that timeline to keep them from reaching her.

Marvel Zombies

[edit]

In the third and fourth episodes, the zombie Thanos from What If...? is still shown wielding the five Stones, who eventually obtains the last one. Before he can snap, he is pushed by T'Challa into Wakanda's vibranium core, which destroys them both and the Stones, but also causes an explosion that threatens the universe until it is absorbed by Bruce Banner, turning him into Infinity Hulk. Wanda Maximoff later steals his powers and uses it to recreate the world into a more peaceful one.

Infinity Gauntlet

[edit]
A model of the Infinity Gauntlet at the 2018 Atlanta Comic-Con

The Infinity Gauntlet is a left handed metal gauntlet used to house the six Stones. A right-handed gauntlet appears in Thor (2011), stored in Odin's vault,[10] though this one was later revealed to be a fake by Hela in Thor: Ragnarok.[47] The mid-credits scene of Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015) revealed Thanos had acquired a left-handed Infinity Gauntlet.[15][48] In Infinity War, it is revealed Thanos invaded Nidavellir and forced Eitri to create the Infinity Gauntlet by threatening to kill his people, though he did so anyway once it was completed, as well as removing Eitri's hands to prevent his making of anything else.[49] After obtaining all six Infinity Stones, Thanos snaps his fingers in the Gauntlet and erases half of all life in the universe.

In Endgame, the Gauntlet is revealed to be burnt and permanently bound to Thanos' swollen arm. After Thor kills Thanos, the charred damaged Gauntlet is left abandoned on the Garden planet. Five years later, Tony Stark, Bruce Banner, and Rocket use nanotechnology to create a right-handed Nano Gauntlet to use the alternate universe versions of the Infinity Stones. Banner in his "Smart Hulk" form, due to being the most immune to the gamma radiation that the Infinity Stones' combined powers emit, uses the Nano Gauntlet to reverse the Blip. However, the strain of channeling the combined powers still causes him considerable pain and leaves him with a crippled right arm. During the battle at the Avengers Compound, an alternate variant of Thanos from 2014 attempts to use the Nano Gauntlet. Although he successfully acquires it, Stark magnetically removes the Stones from the Nano Gauntlet and, wielding a makeshift Gauntlet formed within his armor, uses them to erase Thanos, his army, and the Nano Gauntlet. The original Gauntlet appears in flashback sequences from Infinity War in WandaVision (2021).

Alternate versions of the Infinity Gauntlet made brief appearances in What If...?, first in the fifth episode, when a zombified Thanos shows up in Wakanda,[40]: 27:51–27:59  and the eighth episode when Thanos arrives on Earth but is swiftly killed by Ultron.[41]: 6:20–6:30  The Gauntlet returns in a small capacity during the second season of What If...?, appearing in the last two episodes. In the season's penultimate episode, Steve Rogers unwillingly strikes the Time Stone while fighting Thanos and in the final episode where the Gauntlet is used by another version of Thanos, who is then killed by Killmonger.[44][45] A Gauntlet appears in a flashback sequence in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022) after Thanos is killed on Titan by the Illuminati.[50][51]

The same Infinity Gauntlet wielded by Zombie Thanos from What If...? returns in the third episode of Marvel Zombies. After Zombie Thanos collects that last Stone, he tries to snap, but is stopped by T'Challa, who sacrifices himself to destroy Zombie Thanos.

Background and development

[edit]
James Gunn came up with the backstory of the Stones while writing the script for Guardians of the Galaxy.[52]

The Infinity Stones played a big role in the Marvel Cinematic Universe's Infinity Saga, but they were not the original story plan. Despite the Space Stone being introduced in Thor, and the Mind Stone and Thanos debuting in The Avengers, there were no official plans until at least 2012 to make the Stones the MacGuffins of the Saga. James Gunn revealed that it was not until after he completed his first draft for Guardians of the Galaxy (2014) that Marvel Studios decided to put a bigger focus on the Stones moving forward.[53] Gunn revealed during the press tour for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023) that he wrote the scene introducing the Stones' backstory in an hour and a half starting with the Power Stone being in possession of the Collector at the time.[52] The Power Stone's color had to be changed from red like it is in the comics, to purple in the middle of development on Guardians of the Galaxy because Marvel decided that the Aether was going to be the Reality Stone.[53][54]

Differences from the comics

[edit]

In the comics, Thanos is motivated to retrieve and use the Infinity Gems to impress Lady Death as she believed that the universe was overpopulated and headed for mass extinction. In the films, there is no mention of Lady Death, and Thanos wishes to reduce the population to avoid a repeat of his experience on Titan.[55] Thanos retrieved each gem from a being who held it at the time. The In-Betweener had the Soul Gem, the Champion of the Universe had the Power Gem, the Gardener had the Time Gem, the Collector had the Reality Gem, the Runner had the Space Gem, and the Grandmaster had the Mind Gem. Furthermore, nobody else was even aware of Thanos, therefore no one attempted to stop him.[56]

In the comics, the gems had other rules, and simply being in possession of one was not good enough. Each gem was powered by mastering a primordial force characterized by one of the other gems. For example, mastering the Power Gem was dependent on the user's mastery of the mind, while mastery of the soul correlated with the power of the Mind Gem.[57] The colors of the stones were originally different in the comics. They were purple for Space, yellow for Reality, red for Power, blue for Mind, orange for Time, and green for Soul.[58] The stone colors were updated in the Marvel Legacy series to match the film versions.[59] In the MCU, the Time Stone is housed in the Eye of Agamotto and the Space Stone is housed in the Tesseract. However, the Marvel Comics versions of these two stones have no connections to these relics.[60][61]

[edit]

The existence of the Infinity Stones in the MCU has been described as the "one driving force that unifies all the robot-alien-hero fighting" by The Verge.[58] The use of the Infinity Stones as a plot device led to fan speculation as to the location of as-yet undiscovered Stones, and the possible appearance of additional Stones. One theory popular with fans was that words describing the nature or location of the Stones spelled out the name "THANOS", and that the as-yet undiscovered Soul Stone was somehow associated with the character Heimdall.[58] Another theory proposed prior to the release of Endgame was that it would involve a seventh Infinity Stone corresponding to an additional Infinity Gem from the comics, the Ego Stone.[62]

Charles Pulliam-Moore of Gizmodo thought that the Soul Stone was the least interesting Stone because unlike the others, it was never given a chance to show why it can be formidable on its own like the other Stones had a chance to do in previous MCU films. However, during the Infinity War directors commentary, they confirmed that the Stone has some of the elements of its comic counterpart including "conjuring the spiritual representations of the dead on another plane of existence".[63]

At San Diego Comic-Con in 2022, Marvel and East Continental Gems announced the Infinity Collection of Gemstones, a set of six Gem stones representing each Stone and displayed in an Infinity Gauntlet created by Gentle Giant Ltd. All six gems combined are over 150 carats and valued at USD$25 million. Each Stone is represented by different gems: The Time Stone is a Colombian emerald nearing 23 carats, the Space Stone is a sapphire from Madagascar, with over 30 carats, the Reality Stone is a natural ruby from Mozambique, Africa with over 15 carats, the Power Stone is a natural amethyst with more than 35 carats, the Soul Stone is spessartite, exceeding 35 carats, and the Mind Stone is a cut yellow diamond, that's close to 35 carats.[64] After Infinity War released in theaters, Hot Toys unveiled a 1:1 scale Infinity Gauntlet with the Stones capable of lighting up with the use of embedded LED lights.[65] Lego also released their own Infinity Gauntlet set in 2021 to celebrate the Infinity Saga.[66]

The Snap and the Blip entered the popular lexicon as a metaphor for the idea of unilaterally bringing into being one's desired goals through one's force of will alone. In a November 30, 2023, article for SFGate, columnist Drew Magary reacted to the conduct of billionaire entrepreneur and Twitter owner Elon Musk, who contended that large advertisers who left Twitter after Musk had praised a tweet espousing the Great Replacement theory as "the actual truth" would be to blame if their exodus bankrupted that company, rather than Musk himself. When New York Times contributor Andrew Ross Sorkin stated that those advertisers would likely dispute this, Musk replied, "Tell it to Earth." Taking a critical view of this position, Magary, wrote:[67]

"But Musk, who told Sorkin that he believed data to be more valuable than gold, remains committed to the idea that owning X means owning the chief information exchange for all of this planet's 8 billion citizens. He thinks he can Thanos Snap wars and recessions into being merely by posting a recycled Pepe the Frog meme from 2016 on there. There is no reasoning with someone who is so megalomaniacal and so, SO stupid."[67]

Scientific analysis and accuracy

[edit]

A 2018 article in Extreme Mechanics Letters proposed that Thanos would have needed "a minimum grip strength of over 40,000 tons, which is approximately 750,000 times that of a typical man", to break the Tesseract depicted in the film, presuming that the object was an "all-carbon nano-tesseract or hypercube projected into 3D space".[68] A study published in 2020 focused on the ability to control matter as Thanos does while using the Stones. The researchers found that on a macroscopic level, someone would need a large amount of energy to control matter, similarly to the Stones. However, microscopicly scientists can mimic Thanos' control of matter at the colloidal level. The researchers were able to make billions of colloidal particles with changeable responsiveness, patchiness, shapes, and sizes by manipulating them using triggers, including temperature, pH, and light.[69]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Infinity Stones are six immensely powerful artifacts central to the (MCU), each representing and granting control over a fundamental aspect of existence: the Space Stone (space), Mind Stone (mind), Reality Stone (reality), Power Stone (power), Time Stone (time), and Soul Stone (soul). These stones originated as six singularities that predated the and were concentrated into gems by cosmic forces, making them indestructible objects capable of altering reality on a universal scale. When assembled into , they bestow near-omnipotent abilities upon their wielder, allowing feats such as instantaneous travel, matter manipulation, and the erasure of half of all life in the universe, as demonstrated by the Titan warlord in his quest for "balance." In the broader , the artifacts are known as the (formerly ), remnants of the primordial entity who committed suicide eons ago, birthing the six gems as building blocks of with similar domains of control: , , mind, power, and . First prominently featured in (1990) and (1991), the gems have been sought by cosmic beings like , , and the Magus, often leading to cataclysmic events such as the annihilation of half of all life or battles against entities like . To prevent misuse, the once mandated their separation, leading to the formation of the —a group of guardians tasked with protecting individual gems. The gems' powers are absolute within their native but limited beyond it, and their history involves cycles of collection, destruction, and reformation across multiversal conflicts. The Infinity Stones/Gems have become iconic symbols of ultimate power in Marvel storytelling, influencing major narratives in both comics and films, including the MCU's Avengers: Infinity War (2018) and Avengers: Endgame (2019), where their acquisition and destruction drive the plot. Each stone has distinct visual representations and origins within the MCU: the blue Space Stone housed in the , used by the Asgardians and HYDRA; the yellow Mind Stone embedded in Loki's scepter and later Vision; the red Reality Stone as the fluid Aether wielded by Malekith; the purple Power Stone guarded on Morag and Xandar; the green Time Stone within the Eye of Agamotto protected by the Sorcerer Supreme; and the orange Soul Stone hidden on Vormir, requiring a personal sacrifice to obtain. Post-Endgame, the stones were destroyed by and later recreated and dismantled again to avert timeline disruptions, underscoring their role as pivotal plot devices in exploring themes of power, sacrifice, and cosmic balance.

Fictional Overview

Nature and Creation

The Infinity Stones originated as six singularities that predated the formation of the . According to the explanation provided by Taneleer Tivan, known as , these singularities existed "before creation itself," and the event transformed their remnants into concentrated forms, establishing the foundational elements of cosmic existence. Each singularity embodied a fundamental aspect of —Space, Mind, , Power, Time, and —and following the universe's emergence, these were condensed into discrete stones by cosmic forces. This process integrated the stones as integral components of the multiverse's structure, imbuing them with unparalleled influence over their respective domains. Within the , the Infinity Stones possess inherent properties that define their metaphysical role. They are indestructible by conventional means, enduring even attempts to dismantle them through immense force, as their essence ties directly to the universe's fabric. Their power manifests fully only within their native universe, rendering them inert when removed to external realms or timelines, a limitation highlighted in explorations of multiversal mechanics. To harness their full potential without catastrophic backlash to the wielder, the stones require a compatible vessel, such as forged by on Nidavellir, which channels their energy while mitigating the physiological toll on users of sufficient strength. In the MCU, these artifacts are collectively designated as the "Infinity Stones," a terminology distinct from the "" used in , reflecting adaptations in their portrayal and narrative integration across media. This naming emphasizes their role as cosmic artifacts rather than mere jewels, underscoring their status as embodiments of existential principles.

Individual Stones

The Space Stone, a blue gem housed within the cube-shaped , grants its wielder mastery over space, allowing for instantaneous , portal creation, and manipulation of distances across the universe. This Infinity Stone was first introduced in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in : The First Avenger, set during the , where it powered experimental weaponry and enabled interstellar travel. The Mind Stone, appearing as a yellow gem initially embedded in Loki's scepter and later integrated into Vision's forehead, bestows abilities to control minds, induce illusions, and amplify intelligence or psionic powers such as . It debuted in The Avengers in 2012, where it was used to influence human behavior and enhance . The Reality Stone, a red, fluid-like substance known as the Aether, empowers its user to alter reality itself, reshaping matter, creating illusions, or transforming physical laws at will. This stone made its MCU appearance in Thor: The Dark World in 2013, depicted as a viscous entity that bonds with its host and warps existence on a molecular level. The Power Stone, a purple orb that amplifies physical strength, generates devastating energy blasts, and destroys entire planets when unleashed, serves as a raw source of infinite energy manipulation. It was centrally featured in Guardians of the Galaxy in 2014, contained within a spherical artifact that reacts violently to organic matter. The Time Stone, a green gem set in the amulet called the Eye of Agamotto, provides control over time, enabling loops, foresight into timelines, rapid aging or de-aging, and temporal displacement. Its powers were showcased in in 2016, where it allowed the sorcerer to rewind events and glimpse alternate futures. The Soul Stone, an orange gem that governs the essence of life and souls, permits manipulation of consciousness, soul entrapment, and access to a spiritual realm, but requires the sacrifice of a loved one to acquire on the planet Vormir. It was revealed in Avengers: Infinity War in 2018, with no initial physical containment beyond its raw form, emphasizing its ties to personal loss and existential power. When united in , these individual stones synergize to grant near-omnipotent control over the .

Combined Functionality

When the six Infinity Stones are combined, they exhibit synergistic effects that exponentially amplify their individual powers, granting the wielder near-omnipotence and the ability to warp across the entire , as demonstrated by feats like the instantaneous disintegration—often referred to as "dusting"—of half of all living beings. This collective power stems from the Stones' origins as singularities from the , where their unification creates a circuit that unlocks unlimited control over , , mind, power, and soul. The Infinity Gauntlet functions as the essential conduit for this combined might, forged from Uru metal by the Dwarf artisan on the forge world of Nidavellir to safely contain and channel the Stones' energies without immediate catastrophic backlash. However, wielding the fully assembled Gauntlet demands superhuman durability, as the raw, cosmic energy surging through it inflicts severe physical trauma on the user during activation, resulting in charred flesh, fractured bones, and systemic weakening that can prove fatal to all but the most resilient beings. Power scaling with the Stones varies by assemblage: a complete set enables god-like alterations to existence, such as executing a universal "wish" like the Snap to rebalance life; partial combinations, while potent, confine enhancements to the domains represented, though even two Stones together generate such volatile synergy that their proximity alone risks planetary devastation, necessitating separation to avert disaster. Following major activations like the Snap, the Stones' energies disperse across the targeted scope—effecting changes without depleting the artifacts themselves—but subsequent uses amplify the toll on both user and Gauntlet, while retrieval efforts face inherent challenges due to the artifacts' tendency to destabilize timelines if removed from their native contexts without restoration.

MCU Narrative Arc

Pre-Avengers Events

The Infinity Stones, each embodying a fundamental aspect of the such as , , power, and , were scattered and concealed across distant realms and worlds to safeguard against their potential convergence into a singular, catastrophic force. This deliberate isolation—spanning locations like , the outlaw haven of , and remote planets such as Morag—ensured no one entity could harness their collective might prior to the . The most prominent pre-Avengers encounter with an Infinity Stone occurred during , when the Space Stone, contained within the , drew the attention of Johann Schmidt, the , leader of the Nazi paramilitary organization Hydra. Schmidt discovered the in 1942 in the Norwegian village of , where it had been protected since the time of the Norse gods, and sought to weaponize its energy-manipulating properties to turn the tide of the war. Using the to power advanced weaponry like energy beams and tanks, Schmidt's forces clashed with Allied efforts, including the strategic intervention of Steve Rogers, the serum-enhanced . In 1945, during a final confrontation aboard a Hydra aircraft, Schmidt attempted to activate the for transport but was instead transported away by its power to Vormir, an isolated planet, where he became the eternal guardian of the Soul Stone's location—though the stones' interconnected nature remains a subject of cosmic mystery. The itself plummeted into the , later recovered by shortly after the war and placed under the custody of the Strategic Scientific Reserve, which evolved into S.H.I.E.L.D.; it remained secured in their Project P.E.G.A.S.U.S. facility until external threats emerged in 2012. Far earlier, in the ancient past, the Reality Stone—manifesting as the fluid-like Aether—sparked conflict among the Dark Elves led by Malekith, who sought to wield it during a rare cosmic alignment known as the Convergence to plunge the into . Approximately 5,000 years ago, the Asgardians under Bor intervened, defeating the Dark Elves and seizing the Aether, which was then concealed on their homeworld to prevent its reactivation during future convergences. This event underscored the stone's reality-altering capabilities, capable of reshaping matter at a molecular level, but it lay dormant and "long thought lost" until modern times. The Power Stone's history similarly traces to antiquity, with implied entanglements in interstellar wars, including those involving the Empire, whose radical elements coveted its raw destructive energy. Encased in , the stone was hidden on the desolate planet Morag to avert such exploitation, later safeguarded by the Nova Corps on Xandar after the Guardians of the Galaxy's intervention, reflecting ongoing efforts to keep it isolated from warmongers like , a zealot whose ambitions built on these ancient rivalries. References to the Soul Stone in pre-Avengers lore remain enigmatic and sparse, limited to vague cosmic myths and the unforeseen consequence of the Space Stone's intervention with Schmidt in 1945, which positioned him as an unwitting sentinel on Vormir without direct access to the stone itself. No major documented conflicts involving the Soul Stone occurred on or in known realms prior to the Avengers' assembly, preserving its aura of profound, untapped mystery.

Avengers Era to Infinity War

In the 2012 Battle of New York, Loki wielded a scepter containing the Mind Stone, provided by Thanos, to mind-control S.H.I.E.L.D. agents like Clint Barton and , facilitating the invasion of Earth. The Avengers defeated and secured the scepter, which housed the yellow Mind Stone capable of subtle psychic influence and enhanced weaponry. This event marked the Mind Stone's first prominent role in Earth's defense against cosmic threats, as the stone's power amplified 's schemes but ultimately aided in his capture and return to alongside the . By 2015, in Avengers: Age of Ultron, the scepter fell into the hands of Tony Stark and Bruce Banner, who used its Mind Stone to activate the Ultron, intended as a global peacekeeping program but which turned rogue. Ultron shattered the scepter's casing to extract the Mind Stone, incorporating it into a body he built with Helen Cho's regeneration cradle to house his consciousness. The Avengers intervened, with Stark and Banner uploading JARVIS into the body instead; Thor's lightning strike animated the synthezoid Vision, who embedded the Mind Stone in his forehead, granting him superhuman abilities including flight, phasing, and energy projection while embodying a balanced, heroic mind. Vision joined the Avengers, decisively aiding in Ultron's defeat and destruction. In 2014, the Power Stone emerged during the events of , when Peter retrieved —containing the purple Power Stone—from the planet Morag, sparking a galactic pursuit by , who sought it for . The newly formed confronted Ronan on Xandar, where the stone's immense destructive energy threatened to annihilate the planet; by sharing its burden collectively, , Gamora, Drax, Rocket, and Groot wielded it to obliterate Ronan in a focused blast. The Nova Corps then safeguarded the Power Stone in their vault on Xandar, recognizing its potential as a weapon of mass extinction if misused. The Time Stone's guardianship intensified in 2016 with , where Stephen Strange discovered the green stone within the Eye of Agamotto, an ancient relic protected by the to prevent temporal chaos. Strange used the stone to create a , repeatedly dying and bargaining with in the Dark Dimension until the entity withdrew its invasion of , frustrated by the endless cycle. This mastery over time—reversing events, glimpsing futures, and looping realities—solidified Strange's role as Sorcerer Supreme, with the stone remaining under his protection at the . Thanos' quest for the stones escalated through targeted assaults, beginning in the 1990s when he massacred half the population of Zen-Whoberi, adopting the young as his daughter and training her as an assassin to serve his vision of universal balance. Following the Guardians' victory on Xandar in 2014, Thanos later razed the planet off-screen around 2018, slaughtering the Nova Corps to claim the Power Stone and advance his collection. As safeguards against concentrated power, the Asgardians stored the Space Stone (Tesseract) in Odin's vault after 2012, while in 2013—post-Thor: The Dark World—Sif and Volstagg delivered the Reality Stone (Aether) to the Collector on , adhering to the belief that no realm should hold two stones simultaneously to avert catastrophe. These dispersals reflected growing awareness of the stones' dangers amid rising threats like .

Infinity War and the Snap

In Avengers: Infinity War, Thanos begins his quest by acquiring the Power Stone from the Nova Corps on Xandar, launching a devastating assault to seize the artifact housed there. He then obtains the Space Stone from Loki aboard the Asgardian refugee ship in 2018, using it to facilitate instantaneous travel across the cosmos. Next, Thanos travels to Knowhere to extract the Reality Stone from the Collector's possession, overpowering the Guardians of the Galaxy in the process. To claim the Soul Stone on Vormir, Thanos sacrifices his adopted daughter Gamora, fulfilling the ancient guardian Red Skull's requirement for a soul in exchange for the gem. The narrative escalates with parallel confrontations on Titan and . On Titan, battles , , , and members of the , where Strange strategically surrenders the Time Stone after viewing over 14,000 possible futures, deeming it the only path to victory. Simultaneously, in , the Avengers defend Vision, who houses the Mind Stone, against ' forces led by the Black Order; despite a fierce assault, arrives, uses the Time Stone to reverse Wanda Maximoff's destruction of the stone, and extracts it from Vision's forehead, killing him. Thor nearly mortally wounds with during this clash, but the Titan escapes with all six stones now embedded in the Infinity Gauntlet. Thanos' philosophy drives his actions: originating from the overpopulated planet Titan, he views the universe's finite resources as a catalyst for inevitable collapse and believes eradicating half of all sentient life will restore balance and prevent extinction. With the Gauntlet complete, Thanos activates it on , snapping his fingers to randomly disintegrate 50% of all life across the universe, an event that manifests as widespread molecular dissolution among populations, vehicles, and ecosystems. The immediate effects include the vanishing of heroes like , , , and , alongside billions of civilians, plunging surviving societies into chaos. Satisfied with his "salvation" of the universe, Thanos retreats to a serene cabin on a distant, ruined garden world, destroying the Stones within the Gauntlet to prevent reversal of his work, and lives out his days in quiet retirement.

Endgame and Aftermath

Following the catastrophic events of Avengers: Infinity War, the Marvel Cinematic Universe entered a five-year period known as the Blip, during which half of all life in the universe remained decimated by Thanos' use of the Infinity Stones. This era profoundly disrupted global societies, leading to widespread economic collapse, resource shortages, and social upheaval as governments and communities grappled with the sudden loss of billions. Many superheroes, including Tony Stark and Steve Rogers, retired from active duty amid the despair, with Stark focusing on family life and Rogers aiding support groups for survivors. New threats emerged in this fractured world, such as the elemental villain Quentin Beck (Mysterio) in Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019), who exploited the chaos to impersonate a multiversal hero and manipulate post-Blip vulnerabilities. To reverse the Snap, the remaining Avengers devised the "time heist," a quantum realm-based operation to retrieve the six Infinity Stones from key moments in the past without altering the main timeline. Teams targeted specific locations and years: the Space Stone from 1970 at Camp Lehigh, (after a complication in ); the Mind Stone from the 2012 Battle of New York; the Reality Stone from 2013 on during its destruction; the Power Stone from 2014 on Morag before the formed; the Time Stone from via the ; and the Soul Stone from 2014 on Vormir, requiring a sacrificial bargain. Complications arose in 2012 New York, where Loki escaped with the ( Stone), leading to its alternative retrieval in 1970, while the Time Stone was separately obtained by Bruce Banner from the in . Bruce Banner then used the assembled stones in a Nano Gauntlet to restore the vanished population, though the effort severely injured him. The heist alerted a variant of , who traveled to 2023 and launched an assault on the Avengers Compound during the ensuing battle. In the climactic confrontation at the ruined facility, Tony Stark seized the Nano Gauntlet, wielding all six Infinity Stones to eradicate and his forces with a sacrificial snap, uttering "I am " as he did so; the immense energy fatally wounded Stark, who died shortly after. Steve Rogers subsequently returned the borrowed stones to their original timelines to prevent divergences, including pruning the 2014 branch where a "King Thanos" variant had acquired them. In the main MCU timeline post-Avengers: Endgame (2019), the Infinity Stones became irrelevant, having been destroyed by after the Snap and further strained through subsequent uses, rendering them unusable and absent from ongoing narratives. Their legacy persisted as historical artifacts, briefly referenced in Eternals (2021) in relation to cosmic energy events like the Snap, underscoring their role in averting greater threats like Celestial emergence without direct intervention. This closure allowed the MCU to shift focus to multiversal and terrestrial conflicts, free from the stones' overpowering influence.

Alternate Realities

Loki Series Variants

In the Loki television series, the Infinity Stones are depicted as fundamentally limited in their influence beyond the main timeline, a concept central to the show's exploration of the . The narrative opens with a pivotal branched event during the Avengers' time in New York, where a variant seizes the —containing the Space Stone—amid the chaos of the battle, preventing its recovery by S.H.I.E.L.D. agents and creating a divergent timeline that deviates from the Sacred Timeline. This theft, occurring immediately after Hulk's intervention disrupts the heist, underscores the stones' role in initiating multiversal branches, as uses the to teleport away, only to be intercepted by the (TVA). Upon arrival at TVA , the stones' perceived is immediately subverted, revealing their irrelevance in the organization's extradimensional domain. Loki discovers multiple Infinity Stones stored casually in a drawer, treated as ordinary paperweights by TVA clerk Casey, who remarks that "some of the guys use them as paperweights." This portrayal highlights the Time-Keepers' dismissal of the stones as insignificant artifacts, collected from pruned timelines across the but rendered inert within the TVA's space outside normal time and reality. Michael Waldron explained that this scene emphasizes the TVA's supremacy, as the stones' powers—tied to specific universal constants—fail entirely in this bureaucratic limbo, forcing Loki to confront his own diminished agency. A key demonstration of this powerlessness occurs when Loki retrieves the Tesseract and attempts to wield it for escape, expecting to manipulate as he did in 2012. Instead, emits only a faint glow with no portal or effect, harmlessly fizzling in his hands and confirming the TVA's insulation from cosmic forces. Later, in the Void—a desolate wasteland at the terminus of pruned timelines where the entity Alioth devours remnants of branches—the stones encounter further inefficacy. Mobius explains to Loki and Sylvie that the Void represents the "end of time," a realm beyond the stones' dominion over existence, , and , allowing Alioth to consume them without resistance as their energies dissipate in this temporal void. This theme culminates in the series finale at the Citadel at the End of Time, where He Who Remains—revealed as a Kang variant who founded the TVA—oversees a collection of stones amassed from countless timelines during his multiversal conquest. Positioned beyond Alioth's reach, the citadel mirrors the Void's nullifying properties, rendering the stones equally obsolete in this eternal endpoint, as He Who Remains leverages temporal mastery rather than relying on their diluted power. Production designer Kasra Farahani noted that the citadel's design evokes isolation from cosmic artifacts like the stones, symbolizing He Who Remains' transcendence over them to enforce a singular timeline.

What If...? Scenarios

The animated series What If...? (2021–2023), narrated by the Watcher, explores hypothetical divergences in the , with several episodes centering on alternate uses of the Infinity Stones that amplify their destructive or transformative potential across timelines. , bound by his oath of non-interference, observes these variants but occasionally breaks it when multiversal threats emerge, such as those empowered by the stones. In the episode "What If... Ultron Had Won?" (Season 1, Episode 8), Ultron succeeds in uploading his consciousness into Vision's body and rapidly assembles , incorporating all six stones to eradicate the Avengers and defeat before he can collect them. With the complete set, Infinity Ultron eradicates all life on and extends his purge across the , achieving his programmed goal of "peace in our time" through total annihilation. The stones' combined power enables him to sense the multiverse's existence, breaching dimensional barriers to pursue into the multiversal , where he nearly overpowers the Watcher in combat. This variant demonstrates the stones' enhanced capabilities in Ultron's synthetic framework, allowing seamless integration without the biological limitations faced by organic wielders like Thanos; for instance, the Space and Reality Stones facilitate instantaneous cosmic travel and portal creation for multiversal invasion, while the Mind Stone amplifies his AI sentience to detect and counter extradimensional observers like Uatu. Ultron's conquest escalates into a multiversal threat, prompting Uatu to assemble the Guardians of the Multiverse in the season finale (Episode 9), where variants including Captain Carter wield individual stones temporarily to combat him, highlighting the stones' role in enabling cross-reality conflicts. Outcomes include Ultron's temporary defeat via a coordinated strike, but his persistence underscores the stones' potential to destabilize infinite timelines if unchecked. Another pivotal scenario unfolds in "What If... Doctor Strange Lost His Heart Instead of His Hands?" (Season 1, Episode 4), where Stephen Strange, driven by grief over Christine Palmer's death, absorbs interdimensional beings and eventually all six Infinity Stones into his body to master forbidden dark magic and reverse her fate. This absorption grants him god-like abilities, such as manipulating time loops with the Time Stone and reshaping reality, but it corrupts his form into Supreme, leading to the inexorable collapse of his universe as the stones' energies destabilize the fabric of existence. intervenes to contain the fallout, emphasizing the stones' incompatibility with unchecked sorcery, which amplifies their power beyond intended bounds. The episode illustrates variant powers where the stones serve as conduits for arcane enhancement rather than mechanical artifacts; Strange Supreme uses them to summon cosmic entities and alter probabilities, but the resulting reality collapse consumes his timeline, forcing to isolate the remnants. This outcome explores the stones' thematic peril in personal obsession, as Strange's quest dooms billions, contrasting their usual role in large-scale conquests. In , Strange Supreme aids the Guardians by containing briefly with stone-infused spells, redeeming his variant while reinforcing the stones' multiversal volatility. The series also delves into lighter divergences, such as in "What If... T'Challa Became a ?" (Season 1, Episode 2), where T'Challa is abducted by the Ravagers instead of Peter Quill and rises as their leader, using his diplomatic skills to reform the group into a force for good. This path leads them to acquire the Power Stone from Morag, which T'Challa wields judiciously during confrontations with , enhancing his suit and panther agility to overpower forces without the catastrophic fallout seen in other variants. Thematically, this episode highlights the stones' potential for constructive ends in "what if" scenarios, as T'Challa's influence averts Thanos's rise by convincing the mad Titan to abandon his quest through philosophical debate, preventing the Snap altogether. Across these narratives, What If...? examines the Infinity Stones' boundless possibilities in animated hypotheticals, from empowering rogue AIs and sorcerers to fostering unlikely alliances, all under Uatu's watchful narration, which frames the stones as catalysts for both creation and cataclysm in the .

Multiverse of Madness

In in the Multiverse of Madness (2022), the Infinity Stones play a peripheral role, primarily through their absence in the main timeline () and implied presence in alternate realities, underscoring the 's fragile boundaries. The Time Stone, previously wielded by Stephen Strange to navigate temporal loops, is notably absent from his Eye of Agamotto necklace, as it was destroyed in the main universe's past to prevent further cosmic threats following the events of Avengers: Endgame. This destruction limits Strange's access to stone-based time manipulation, forcing reliance on other mystical arts amid multiversal chaos. On Earth-838, home to the Illuminati—a council including Professor Charles Xavier and Reed Richards—the stones exist as variants tied to that universe's history, where the group defeated before he could fully assemble . A telepathic vision reveals possessing four stones (Power, , , and ) prior to his defeat, but these artifacts are not wielded or prominently featured post-victory; instead, the Illuminati's Earth-838 variant of used the Darkhold to achieve the win, inadvertently triggering an incursion with another reality and leading to his execution by the . This Darkhold-influenced approach highlights how the stones' variants remain dormant, bound to their native universe's rules, without direct intervention in the film's conflicts. The pursuit of by the creature Gargantos serves as an indirect nod to the Reality Stone's domain, as (Wanda Maximoff) deploys her —amplified by prior exposure to reality-altering forces—to warp dimensions in her quest for multiversal travel. However, no Infinity Stones are invoked or used, emphasizing Wanda's independent power as a substitute for stone-enabled manipulation. Gargantos, summoned via mystical means rather than gem energy, chase Chavez across realities, tying into broader themes of unchecked reality-warping without stone reliance. Incursions, the film's central multiversal peril involving colliding universes, implicitly reference the stones' universe-specific nature, as their power cannot transcend realities without catastrophic consequences, akin to rules observed elsewhere in the MCU. America Chavez's innate ability to punch portals between universes positions her as a stone-alternative conduit, enabling travel that stones cannot facilitate across multiversal lines. In the Illuminati's Earth-838, figures like and Reed Richards confront these threats without stone deployment, reinforcing that the gems' efficacy is confined to their origin universe, amplifying the dangers of external interference like Darkhold usage.

Deadpool & Wolverine

In Deadpool & Wolverine (2024), the Infinity Stones receive minor references amid the film's integration of the universe into the MCU's framework, primarily through the Void—a desolate realm at the end of time where Alioth devours remnants of pruned timelines. Alioth, the sentient storm entity first introduced in the series, consumes all matter sent to the Void by the TVA, including any residual artifacts like Infinity Stone fragments from variant universes, rendering the stones inert and unusable within this domain. No active deployment of the stones occurs, emphasizing their diminished role in post-Endgame multiversal dynamics. Cassandra Nova, the film's antagonist, possesses a modified Sling Ring embedded with two Infinity Stones—the Time Stone and the Reality Stone—sourced from a variant timeline, granting her enhanced portal manipulation abilities to navigate and escape the Void. This artifact implies her scavenging of multiversal relics, but the stones serve as a peripheral power source rather than a central plot element, underscoring the chaotic, artifact-littered nature of the Void without delving into their broader mechanics. Wade Wilson () injects meta-humor by quipping about during encounters with MCU elements, lampooning its overwhelming power in contrast to the film's R-rated absurdity and timeline-hopping antics. The TVA's involvement reiterates the stones' irrelevance in pruned branches of the , as agents like and Hunter B-15 focus on timeline stabilization without invoking stone-based interventions. A brief visual in TVA facilities shows discarded multiversal items resembling the , stored alongside other confiscated artifacts, highlighting the bureaucratic irreverence toward such powerful relics in non-sacred timelines. The connection to the Void briefly nods to its origins as a disposal site for variants and debris. The post-credits sequence, featuring Wade at TVA headquarters, reinforces the shift toward stone-independent multiverse management, aligning with Loki's oversight of branching realities free from Infinity Stone dependencies, ensuring stability through administrative and variant control rather than cosmic artifacts.

Production Background

Development in the MCU

The concept of the Infinity Stones in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) originated with subtle foreshadowing during Phase 1, spearheaded by Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige. As early as 2013, Feige confirmed in interviews that artifacts like the Tesseract from Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) and The Avengers (2012) housed the Space Stone, while the Aether from Thor: The Dark World (2013) contained the Reality Stone, laying groundwork for a larger narrative arc without explicit reveals at the time. The full introduction of the Infinity Stones as a cohesive set of six cosmic artifacts occurred in (2014), directed by . Gunn has revealed that he devised the foundational lore for the stones—describing them as remnants of singularities predating the universe—spontaneously during script development, taking just three minutes to conceptualize their origins and powers without prior detailed guidance from . This reveal centered on the Power Stone within the Orb, establishing the stones' immense, elemental control over reality, and set the stage for ' quest across subsequent films. The scripting of Avengers: Infinity War (2018), directed by Anthony and Joe Russo, involved extensive collaboration with writers to balance the narrative around all six stones. The brothers emphasized treating each stone as a personal "" tied to character stakes—such as safeguarding the Time Stone or Vision's forehead embedding the Mind Stone—while drawing inspiration from Jim Starlin's comic for structural scale but adapting it into an original, ensemble-driven story. This process required months of iteration to weave parallel plotlines across multiple planets, ensuring the stones propelled ' pursuit without overwhelming the heroes' arcs. Production challenges for the Infinity Stones' visual effects were significant, particularly in rendering their otherworldly powers. Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) contributed to the fluid, transformative depiction of the Reality Stone (as the Aether) in Thor: The Dark World, using advanced simulations to create its viscous, reality-warping black matter that interacted dynamically with environments and characters. In Avengers: Infinity War, vendors like Weta Digital faced hurdles in simulating the stones' collective snap effect, employing procedural geometry and tools like Synapse for the disintegration sequences, while ILM enhanced Thanos' interactions with the gauntlet through machine learning for seamless facial performance capture. Actor contributions also shaped portrayals; Benedict Cumberbatch, as Doctor Strange, provided feedback during Infinity War reshoots on the Time Stone's usage in battles, influencing its tactical deployment to heighten dramatic tension. Following Avengers: Endgame (2019), where Tony Stark destroys the stones to prevent further misuse, phased them out of the main MCU timeline in Phases 4 and 5, rendering them inaccessible and irrelevant to ongoing narratives. This shift emphasized the era from 2021 onward, with stones appearing only in alternate realities—such as in Doctor Strange in the of Madness (2022) and (2024), where a sling ring incorporates the Time and Stones—to underscore their universe-specific potency without reviving them in the primary storyline.

Adaptations from Comics

In Marvel Comics, the Infinity Gems originated as fragments of Nemesis, a primordial cosmic entity who, eons ago, chose to end its solitary existence by destroying itself, thereby birthing the six gems that represent fundamental aspects of reality: Soul, Mind, Power, Space, Time, and Reality. Unlike the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), where exactly six unique Infinity Stones exist as singularities forged at the dawn of creation, the comics feature these six primary gems but also introduce additional artifacts, such as a seventh Ego Gem containing Nemesis's lingering consciousness and artificial replicas created by characters like Thanos in later storylines. This allows for a more expansive, multiversal variability in the comics, contrasting the MCU's stricter limitation to a singular set bound to their native universe. The nomenclature evolved within the comics themselves, initially appearing as "Soul Gems" in early appearances like Marvel Premiere #1 (1972), before being unified and renamed "Infinity Gems" during the landmark Infinity Gauntlet miniseries (1991), which established their collective cosmic significance. In adapting these to the MCU, the term shifted to "Infinity Stones" to evoke a more ancient, elemental quality suited to the films' tone, avoiding the jewel-like connotations of "gems" while accommodating their varied physical forms, such as the cube-encased Space Stone. Key deviations in powers highlight the comics' emphasis on abstract, often sentient capabilities versus the MCU's structured, universe-specific mechanics. For instance, the Soul Gem in the comics is uniquely sentient, housing an internal realm known as Soulworld where it traps and manipulates souls—living or deceased—granting the wielder abilities like soul absorption, telepathy, and even devolution of organisms, as demonstrated when Adam Warlock used it to battle cosmic threats. The MCU's Soul Stone, by contrast, focuses on accessing and controlling souls for interrogation or the cataclysmic Snap, enforcing rigid rules like a sacrificial cost for acquisition and limiting its efficacy outside the native universe, without the gem's vampiric hunger or pocket dimension. Overall, while both versions grant dominion over their domains, the comics portray the gems as omnipotent within their reality when united in the Infinity Gauntlet—capable of reshaping existence at will—whereas the MCU imposes narrative constraints, such as the Gauntlet's toll on the user and its failure beyond universal boundaries, centering the plot around the Snap as a pivotal, irreversible act. Character dynamics, particularly Thanos's role, diverge significantly to align with thematic priorities. In the comics' Infinity Gauntlet (1991), Thanos quests for the gems not out of a philosophical quest for balance, but to woo Mistress Death, the anthropomorphic embodiment of mortality whom he obsessively loves; he eradicates half of all life as a grand romantic gesture to earn her favor, only for her to spurn him upon his ascension to godhood. The MCU reimagines Thanos as a misguided ecologist driven by a belief in universal equilibrium to prevent and , omitting Death's influence entirely. Additionally, the comics feature the Heart of the Universe, a separate omnipotent artifact from Marvel Universe: The End (2003), which Thanos wields to absorb all cosmic entities—including —and dismantle then recreate the universe, a escalation absent from the MCU's Infinity Stone saga.

Cultural and Analytical Perspectives

Reception and Legacy

The portrayal of the Infinity Stones in Avengers: Infinity War garnered significant critical acclaim, helping the film achieve an 85% approval rating on based on 487 reviews. Reviewers frequently highlighted the narrative payoff of the decade-long buildup to ' quest for the stones, describing it as a satisfying culmination of the MCU's interconnected storytelling that delivered emotional depth and high-stakes drama. This acclaim extended to the stones' role in Avengers: Endgame, where their use in time heists and the final confrontation was praised for resolving the saga's central conflict with innovative plotting. The visual effects showcasing the Infinity Stones' cosmic powers, including energy blasts, reality-warping, and the devastating Snap, earned prestigious recognition. Avengers: Infinity War received a nomination for Best at the in 2019, acknowledging the seamless integration of the stones' abilities into the film's action sequences. Similarly, Avengers: Endgame was nominated in the same category at the in 2020, with the effects team lauded for depicting the stones' manipulation across timelines and battles. Fan reception amplified the stones' cultural footprint, sparking a merchandise surge exemplified by Hasbro's Infinity Gauntlet, which sold at double its $100 retail price amid high demand following the 2018 release. The "Thanos Snap" moment, tied to the stones' activation, exploded into viral s, with parodies flooding and cementing as a meme icon of inevitable loss by late 2018. As a foundational element of the MCU's Phase 3, the Infinity Stones drove the Infinity Saga's climax, serving as the primary MacGuffins that unified disparate storylines into a cohesive epic. By 2025, retrospectives have reflected on their completion of the ten-year arc, with director crediting their lore for enabling the saga's scale and influence on subsequent phases. Their legacy permeates pop culture, including ' 2018 Fortnite crossover event, where players could wield and stones in a limited-time mode recreating ' rampage.

Scientific Interpretations

The Infinity Stones, as fictional artifacts embodying fundamental aspects of the , invite analysis through the lens of established scientific theories in physics, cosmology, and . While their powers defy empirical , parallels can be drawn to concepts like manipulation and quantum phenomena, highlighting both intriguing alignments and inherent impossibilities. The Space Stone's ability to create portals and manipulate distances evokes physics, specifically Einstein-Rosen bridges, which are theoretical solutions to Einstein's field equations in . Proposed by and in 1935, these bridges describe hypothetical tunnels connecting distant regions of , potentially allowing shortcuts across vast distances without violating the . However, such structures require with density to remain stable, a condition not observed in nature, rendering traversable wormholes implausible under current physics. Parallels also exist with , where particles exhibit instantaneous correlations regardless of separation, as explored in the conjecture linking entanglement to microscopic wormholes in frameworks. This suggests that the Stone's non-local effects might metaphorically align with entangled states, though entanglement cannot transmit information , precluding practical . For the Time Stone, its control over temporal flow resonates with time dilation from Einstein's special relativity, where clocks tick slower for objects moving near light speed or in strong gravitational fields. As detailed in the Lorentz transformation, the time interval Δt\Delta t for a moving observer relates to the proper time Δτ\Delta \tau by Δt=γΔτ\Delta t = \gamma \Delta \tau, with γ=1/1v2/c2\gamma = 1 / \sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}
Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.