Infinity Gems
Infinity Gems | |
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The Silver Surfer Vol. 3 #44 (Dec. 1990) | |
In story information | |
Type | Jewels |
Element of stories featuring | Adam Warlock Thanos |
The Infinity Gems (originally referred to as Soul Gems and later as Infinity Stones) are six fictional gems appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, named after and embodying various aspects of existence. The gems can grant whoever wields them various powers in accordance to the aspect of existence they represent, and have the potential of turning the wielder into a god-like being when the main six (Mind, Power, Reality, Soul, Space, and Time) are held together. Thus, they are among the most powerful and sought-after items in the Marvel Universe; playing important roles in several storylines, in which they were wielded by characters such as Thanos and Adam Warlock. Some of these stories depict additional Infinity Gems or similar objects. Although, the Infinity Gems altogether give its user nigh-omnipotence, the Gems only function on the universe they belong to and not on alternate realities.
The Gems have appeared in several media adaptations outside of comics, including the Marvel Cinematic Universe film franchise, where they are called Infinity Stones and have their colors altered. These changes were later adapted into the comics.
Publication history
This section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience. |
The first appearance of an Infinity Gem occurred in 1972 in Marvel Premiere #1. It was originally called a "Soul Gem".[1][2] In 1976, a second "Soul Gem" appeared in a Captain Marvel story which established that there were six Soul Gems, each with different powers.[3] One year later, two more "Soul Gems" were introduced in a Warlock crossover involving Spider-Man.[2] The main six Gems appeared when the death-obsessed villain Thanos attempted to use them to extinguish every star in the universe.[2][4] In a 1988 storyline in Silver Surfer vol. 3, the Elders of the Universe tried to use 6 of the "Soul Gems" to steal the energy of the world-eating entity Galactus.[2]
In the 1990 limited series
The 6 main Gems are next gathered by Warlock's evil
Then, 6 of the gems appeared in the crossover between the Marvel universe and the Ultraverse, when the vampiric Rune, stole the gems from the Infinity Watch.[10] The gems were dispersed in the Ultraverse and Loki looked for them. The reunion of the gems with a seventh gem, the Ego Gem, revealed the existence of the entity Nemesis, that said that she was the conscience of the gems.[11] Nemesis was slain and the gems dispersed again.
In a story arc of the Thanos series (2003–2004),
In a 2010 Avengers storyline, the human criminal known as the
As a result of the Incursions, the entire Multiverse is destroyed. However,
Following the recreation of the Multiverse, the Infinity Gems (now known as the Infinity Stones) are recreated and scattered across the universe, with their colors switched and some taking on uncut ingot forms. In
Description
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Each Gem is shaped like a small oval
The six Infinity Gems include:
Name | Color | Powers and capabilities | Known users | Pocket universe (2018–present) | |
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Original (1972–2016) |
Marvel Legacy (2017–present) | ||||
Mind | Blue | Yellow | Allows the user to enhance their mental and psionic abilities and access the thoughts and dreams of other beings. At full potential, when backed by the Power Gem, the Mind Gem can access all minds in existence simultaneously. The Mind Gem is also the manifestation of the universal subconscious. | Anthony Edward Stark (Tony Stark); | The Mindscape: allows the user to bring anything they imagine or dream of to life. Overseen by the Sleepwalkers .
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Power | Red | Purple | Allows the user to access and manipulate all forms of energy and/or powers; i.e. enhancing their physical strength and durability; augment any superhuman ability; and boost the effects of the other five Gems. At full potential, the Power Gem grants the user nigh-omnipotence. | Anthony Edward Stark (Tony Stark); Titania; Mister Fantastic; The Hood; Red Hulk; Xiambor; Namor; The Juggernaut; Nova Corps; Star-Lord; Requiem; Emma Frost; Loki; Ronan the Accuser
|
The Arena: resembles a Colosseum where heroes fight each other in a contest of might. Ruled by Dynamus, the living embodiment of the Power Cosmic. |
Reality | Yellow | Red | Allows the user to fulfill their wishes, even if the wish is in direct contradiction with alternate reality the user wishes.
|
Anthony Edward Stark (Tony Stark); Collector; Thanos; Nebula; Adam Warlock; Rune; Night Man; Galactus; Black Bolt; Hood; Iron Man; Black Widow; Vision; Carol Danvers; Requiem; Kang the Conqueror ; Loki; Ripley Ryan
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World Pool: used to access alternate realities, which are portrayed as an endless comic book collection. Overseen by Archivus, the chronicler of the Multiverse. |
Soul | Green | Orange | Allows the user to steal, control, manipulate, and alter living and dead souls; as well as animate the motionless. The Soul Gem also acts as a gateway to an idyllic pocket universe. At full potential, when backed by the Power Gem, the Soul Gem grants the user control over all life in the universe. | Anthony Edward Stark (Tony Stark); | Soul World: the final resting place for all lost spirits. Overseen by the Soul-Eater Devondra. |
Space | Purple | Blue | Allows the user to exist in any location; move any object anywhere throughout reality; warp or rearrange space; teleport themselves and others; increase their speed, and alter the distance between objects contrary to the laws of physics. At full potential, when backed by the Power Gem, the Space Gem grants the user nigh-omnipresence. | Anthony Edward Stark (Tony Stark); ; Loki | The Vast: an endless expanse of empty existence stretching on into forever. Its ruler is unknown. |
Time | Orange | Green | Allows the user to see into the past and the future; stop, slow down, speed up or reverse the flow of time; travel through time; change the past and the future; age and de-age beings, and trap people or entire universes in unending loops of time. At full potential, when backed by the Power Gem, the Time Gem grants the user nigh-omniscience and total control over the past, present, and future. | Anthony Edward Stark (Tony Stark); Gardener; Thanos; Nebula; Adam Warlock; Gamora; ; Loki; Hector Bautista | Ellipsis: manipulates the flow of time for anyone within it. Its ruler is unknown. |
Additional Gems have appeared in crossover media and alternate universes outside the Marvel Universe.
Name | Color | Powers and capabilities | Known owners |
---|---|---|---|
Ego | White | The Ego Gem contains the consciousness of the cosmic entity Nemesis and recreates her when united with the other six Gems. The Ego Gem is found in the Ultraverse when the Asgardian god Loki attempts to steal the other six Gems. | Sersi; Nemesis |
Death | Yellow | In The Infinity Gauntlet 2015 limited series, released as part of the Secret Wars crossover event, Anwen Bakian uses the Reality Stone to create the Death Stone. Anwen gives it to Thanos, and it corrupts him with black matter and turns him to dust. | Anwen Bakian; Thanos |
Continuity | Black | Allows total control over continuity. | Deadpool |
Other versions
Council of Reeds
The
Contest of Champions
In the Contest of Champions miniseries, an alternate version of Tony Stark uses the Reality Gem to win the superhero civil war and affect the outcome of a presidential election. When he tries to use the Gem on Battleworld, he is killed by the Maestro, who says the Gems do not work in any universe other than their own.[34][full citation needed]
Heroes Reborn (2021)
In an alternate reality depicted in the Heroes Reborn miniseries, the Infinity Gems are in the possession of Thanos, who has them placed in his Infinity Rings.[35][36]
New Avengers
During the "Incursion" storyline, the Avengers travel to a parallel Earth where a pastiche of the Justice League have replaced this Earth's Avengers who all died in a previous cataclysm. Here the Gems are all square planes of "forever glass" which are assembled into the "Wishing Cube", a composite of the concepts of the Infinity Gems and the Cosmic Cube.[37]
Secret Wars
After various alternate universes are combined into Battleworld, Doctor Strange gathers Infinity Gems from other universes into a new Infinity Gauntlet that works in the area where Doom has built his palace. Strange leaves the Gauntlet hidden until he has access to someone he can trust it with. After his death, the Gauntlet is claimed by T'Challa,[38][full citation needed] who uses it against Doom in the final battle.[39][full citation needed][40][full citation needed]
A separate section of Battleworld known as New Xandar also has a Gauntlet fought over by multiple factions until the majority of the Stones, except the Reality Stone, were taken by Thanos.[41] Thanos eventually tracks the missing Stone to Nova Corps member Anwen Bakian. When Thanos confronts her to get the Stone, Anwen gives him a duplicate of the Reality Stone she created called the 'Death Stone'. When used along with the other five Stones, the Death Stone corrupts Thanos with black matter and turns him to dust.[42]
Ultimate Marvel
In the
What If?
In a reality where
In an alternate reality where the original Fantastic Four died, a new Fantastic Four – consisting of Spider-Man, Hulk, Wolverine, and Ghost Rider – was formed. With Iron Man replacing Ghost Rider, they were the only heroes available to fight Thanos when he initially assembled the Infinity Gauntlet. Despite Iron Man's use of Negative Zone-enhanced Celestial armor, Thanos still easily defeated the team until Wolverine tricked Thanos into erasing Mephisto from existence before cutting off Thanos's left arm, and therefore the Infinity Gauntlet. With Thanos powerless, Spider-Man used the gauntlet to undo the events of Thanos's godhood.[51][full citation needed]
In other media
This section needs additional citations for verification. (April 2020) |
Television
- The Infinity Gauntlet, Infinity Gems, and an original weapon called the "Infinity Sword" appear in The Super Hero Squad Show.[52] After Iron Man and Doctor Doom destroy the Infinity Sword while attempting to claim it, the first season of the series sees the titular squad collecting the sword's fragments, or "Infinity Fractals", before Doctor Doom's Lethal Legion can. While Doom rebuilds the Infinity Sword, the Silver Surfer tells him that it is useless without the Infinity Gauntlet before taking the sword out to space. The second season sees Thanos attempting to collect the Infinity Gems for his Infinity Gauntlet until the Silver Surfer, corrupted into the Dark Surfer by the sword, steals the completed gauntlet from him. After the Super Hero Squad defeat the Dark Surfer, the gems and sword are destroyed, sending Infinity Fractals across the universe.
- The Infinity Gauntlet and five of the Infinity Stones appear in Avengers Assemble. This version of the Infinity Gauntlet has slots for five of the stones as the Soul Stone was in Adam Warlock's possession and Thanos feared him.
- The Soul Stone appears in Guardians of the Galaxy.
- The Power Stone appears in the Marvel Future Avengers episode "Mission Black Market Auction". This version was originally kept within Asgard before it was stolen and taken to a black market on Earth.
Film
The Infinity Stones appear in
Marvel Cinematic Universe
The Infinity Gems, renamed Infinity Stones, play important roles in the first three phases of the
Video games
- The Infinity Gems appear in Marvel Super Heroes.[54]
- The Infinity Gems appear in Marvel Super Heroes in War of the Gems.[55]
- The Power, Soul, Reality, and Space Gems appear in Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes.
- The Infinity Gems and Infinity Sword appear in Marvel Super Hero Squad: The Infinity Gauntlet.[56] Additionally, Loki creates a fake seventh Infinity Gem, the pink "Rhythm Gem", for his and the Enchantress' use.
- The Infinity Stones and Infinity Gauntlet make a cameo appearance in the end of Lego Marvel's Avengers.
- The Infinity Stones and Infinity Gauntlet appear in Fortnite Battle Royale.[57]
- The Infinity Stones appear in Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite.[58][59] Players can equip one of the Infinity Stones at the start of a battle, which can be used perform an "Infinity Surge" technique at any time or a limited "Infinity Storm" ability that gives the character a temporary power-up; the effects vary by the chosen stone.[60] In the game's story, Ultron and Sigma use the Space and Reality Stones to fuse themselves into Ultron Sigma and merge the Marvel and Capcom universes into one under their control, leading to the heroes of both universes joining forces to retrieve the remaining Infinity Stones before Ultron Sigma. While Thanos unknowingly destroys the Reality Stone while fighting Ultron Sigma, X destroys the hybrid villain before the heroes build a new society.[61]
- The Infinity Stones and a suit of "Infinity Armor", of which the Infinity Gauntlet is a part of, appear in Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3: The Black Order. These versions of the Stones and the Armor came into existence at the Heart of Infinity near the center of the universe. Additionally, using them together will make the user unstable and cause them to progressively kill themselves and all life in the universe.
Miscellaneous
- From January to August 2012, Wizkids presented the Infinity Gauntlet program at stores that host HeroClix tournaments.[62] An Infinity Gauntlet prop was released, followed by a different Gem each month, each of which can be added to the Gauntlet to increase its power. Additionally, the Gems can be displayed on a stand that comes with the Gauntlet or on each Elder that Thanos encountered in the story Thanos Quest.[63]
- Replica Infinity Gauntlets were given out as trophies at Ultimate Fighting Game Tournament 8, a Road to Evo tournament held in 2012.[64]
References
- ^ The Power of Warlock #1–8 (Aug. 1972 – Jun. 1973: bi-monthly)
- ^ a b c d Shiach, Kieran (November 10, 2016). "The History Of The Infinity Stones Explained". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
- ^ a b Captain Marvel #45 (July 1976)
- ^ Avengers Annual #7 and Marvel Two-In-One Annual #2 (1977)
- ^ Thanos Quest #1–2 (Sep.–Oct. 1990)
- ^ Silver Surfer (vol. 3) #44.
- ^ Warlock and The Infinity Watch #1 (Feb. 1992)
- ^ Infinity War #1–6 (June–Nov. 1992)
- ^ Infinity Crusade #1–6 (June–Nov. 1993)
- ^ Rune/Silver Surfer #1 (June 1995)
- ^ Avengers/Ultraforce #1 (September 1995)
- ^ Thanos #1–6 (Dec. 2003 – Apr. 2004)
- ^ New Avengers: Illuminati #1–5 (Feb 2007 – Jan 2008)
- ^ The Avengers #7 (November 2010)
- ^ The Avengers #10 (March 2011)
- ^ The Avengers vol. 4 #12
- ^ New Avengers vol. 2 #2–3
- ^ Avengers vol. 5 #34
- ^ Marvel Legacy #1 (September 2017)
- ^ Guardians of the Galaxy #147
- ^ Captain Marvel #126
- ^ Thanos #13
- ^ a b Infinity Countdown: Prime #1
- ^ Infinity Countdown: Adam Warlock #1
- ^ Infinity Wars: Sleepwalker #1–4 (Oct. 2018 – Jan. 2019)
- ^ Infinity Wars: Infinity #1 (Jan. 2019)
- ^ "Cuts of gemstones". Rocks & Co. Retrieved August 10, 2018.
- ^ Silver Surfer vol. 3, #7 (Jan. 1988)
- ^ Silver Surfer vol. 3, #9 (March 1988)
- ^ Silver Surfer vol. 3, #7–8 (January–February 1988)
- ^ Avengers/Ultraforce one-shot (1995), (w) Glenn Herdling, Warren Ellis (a) Angel Medina, George Pérez
- ^ Marvel Legacy #1 (Sept. 2017)
- ^ Fantastic Four #570–574
- ^ Contest of Champions vol. 2 #10. Marvel Comics.
- .
- ^ "HEROES REBORN (2021)". Comic Book Round Up. May 2021. Archived from the original on May 9, 2021. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
- ^ New Avengers vol. 3 #19 (August 2014)
- ^ Secret Wars #7
- ^ Secret Wars #8
- ^ Secret Wars #9
- ^ Secret Wars: Infinity Gauntlet #1–4 (2015)
- ^ Secret Wars: Infinity Gauntlet #6 (2015)
- ^ Ultimate Origins #3 (2008)
- ^ Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #16
- ^ Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #21
- ^ Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #25
- ^ Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #27
- ^ Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #29
- ^ Ultimate Comics: Ultimates #30
- ^ What If: Secret Wars #1
- ^ What If: Newer Fantastic Four #1
- ^ Liu, Ed (2012-08-30). "Review: 'Super Hero Squad Show' Season 2 Vol. 4: Curtain Call for the Squaddies!". ToonZone. Retrieved 2016-11-17.
- ^ Sarkisian, Jacob. "'Loki' features a neat detail involving Infinity Stones being used as paper-weights, and it has a hidden meaning". Business Insider. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ "Marvel Super Heroes Review". IGN. 1997-09-30. Archived from the original on 2000-04-13. Retrieved 2013-12-18.
- ^ mmygind (2015-06-08). "Retro Review: 'Marvel Super Heroes: War of the Gems' (1996, Capcom, Super Nintendo)". Last Token Gaming. Retrieved 2016-12-15.
- ^ Cork, Jeff (2010-12-09). "A Funny Game In More Ways Than One – Marvel Super Hero Squad: The Infinity Gauntlet – Xbox 360". Game Informer. Retrieved 2016-12-15.
- ^ Romano, Nick (May 7, 2018). "Thanos is coming to Fortnite for epic Avengers: Infinity War crossover". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on May 7, 2018. Retrieved May 7, 2018.
- ^ McWhertor, Michael (2016-12-03). "Marvel vs. Capcom returns with Marvel vs. Capcom Infinite". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved 2016-12-03.
- CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
- ^ Vazquez, Suriel (December 3, 2016). "Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite - Two-On-Two Fights Are Made More Chaotic By Infinity Stones". Game Informer. Archived from the original on April 15, 2017. Retrieved December 4, 2016.
- ^ Morse, Ben (April 25, 2017). "'Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite' Smashes Back With New Details". Marvel Comics. Archived from the original on April 26, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
- ^ "WizKids Plans Infinity Gauntlet". ICv2. GCO, LLC. 5 October 2011. Archived from the original on 16 June 2017. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
- ^ "Infinity Gauntlet comes to HeroClix!". Comics World. 2014-06-20. Archived from the original on 2014-04-22. Retrieved 2016-11-18.
- ^ Walker, Ian (2012-03-29). "Dominion Over Power, Space, Time, Soul, Reality, and Mind to Be Given as UFGT8 Grand Prize Trophies". Shoryuken. Archived from the original on 2012-06-22. Retrieved 2012-12-09.
External links
- Infinity Gems at the Marvel Universe wiki
- Infinity Stones from Marvel Cinematic Database