Thanos’ most well-known brush with omnipotence was in “Infinity Gauntlet,” the comedian that grew to become the spine of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In the course of the build-up mini-series “Thanos Quest,” Thanos collected the six universe-controlling Infinity Gems (typically referred to as the Soul Gems) and positioned them collectively on a metallic Gauntlet, permitting him to wield their energy concurrently.
The MCU, after all, turned the Infinity Stones from plot gadget right into a multi-movie MacGuffin fetch quest, giving every particular person stone and its powers rather more weight. However the finish was the identical: Thanos collected the six and worn out half of all life, even when he was doing it for a cosmic “steadiness” as an alternative of making an attempt to woo Loss of life with a mass providing in her identify.
However Victor Von Doom was claiming godhood on the pages of Marvel Comics when Thanos was however a glimmer within the thoughts’s eye of Mr. Starlin. Probably the most well-known storylines in Stan Lee and Jack Kirby’s authentic “Incredible 4” is in points #57-60, when he steals the Energy Cosmic from the Silver Surfer and wreaks havoc.
This was tailored, poorly, within the 2007 movie “Incredible 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer.” (“Let’s all go for a spin!” Doom doesn’t make puns!)
Within the authentic 1984 “Secret Wars” by Jim Shooter, the best heroes and villains of the Marvel Universe are delivered to Battleworld by a godlike being referred to as the Beyonder, who needs them to combat for his amusement. Doom in the end steals the Beyonder’s powers and turns into the sequence’ final villain. This story, right down to God Emperor Doom, is after all the premise for the 2015 “Secret Wars,” even when the latter is a lot higher.
Earlier than the “Secret Wars” remake, Hickman additionally explored Doom reaching godhood in his run on “Incredible 4.” Within the epilogue to “FF” #16 (drawn by Steve Epting), Doom claims two Infinity Gauntlets from the destroyed interdimensional “Council of Reeds” and builds, as an alternative, a “Parliament of Doom” made up of his personal variants.
“Incredible 4” #611 (by Hickman and Ryan Stegman) adopted up on this. Drawn to the universe the place the Gauntlet first got here from, Doom finds a void and fills it with creation, explicitly invoking the Guide of Genesis. Doom’s creations, although, overthrow him.( “It was then, on the seventh day, that Doom realized a mistake had been made. He had made a universe in his personal picture.”) Doom in the end wants the Incredible 4 to rescue him, and concludes that ruling as a god was “beneath [him]” anyway.