Marvel Cinematic Universe timeline
The fictional timeline of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) media franchise is the continuity of events for several feature films, television series, television specials, short films, and the I Am Groot shorts, which are produced by Marvel Studios, and the group of Netflix series produced by Marvel Television.
While the early films of Phase One and Phase Two of the franchise followed each other in the timeline similar to their release order, Phase Three saw many of the films overlapping with each other in the timeline, while also introducing the first prequel property, Captain Marvel (2019). The Phase Three film Avengers: Endgame (2019) featured characters traveling into the past and introduced a five-year time jump, with many subsequent releases in Phase Four and Phase Five set after Endgame's events in the timeline. The television series Loki and What If...? were the first properties to occur outside of the main timeline and explore alternative timelines and universes.
There have been numerous attempts by Marvel Studios and others to codify the events of the MCU, which have been subject to perceived
As of the Phase Five television series Secret Invasion (2023) and the film The Marvels (2023), the "present day" in the MCU is 2026. The following covers and discusses MCU media released by Marvel Studios and the Netflix series by Marvel Television.
Overview
During
When
"On the
the Multiverse Saga, you never know when timelines may just crash or converge (hint, hint/spoiler alert)."
With
Depictions
Within the MCU
The Infinity Saga
Captain America: Civil War begins a year after Age of Ultron,[7] with Avengers: Infinity War set two years after that.[41] Black Panther and Spider-Man: Homecoming respectively beginning a week and several months after Civil War;[42][43] Thor: Ragnarok beginning four years after The Dark World and two years after Age of Ultron,[44][45] around the same time as Civil War and Homecoming;[8] Doctor Strange taking place over a whole year and ending in late 2016,[46] "up to date with the rest of the MCU";[47] Ant-Man and the Wasp also set two years after Civil War and shortly before Infinity War;[48] and both Guardians of the Galaxy and its sequel Vol. 2 being explicitly set in 2014,[49][50] which Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige believed would create a four-year gap between Vol. 2 and Infinity War, though the other MCU films up to that point do not specify years onscreen.[51]
Ant-Man and the Wasp and Captain Marvel are set earlier in the timeline;[16] the latter is set in 1995.[52] Avengers: Endgame begins shortly after Infinity War and ends in 2023 after a five-year time jump.[53] It confirms dates for several of the other films, including The Avengers in 2012, Thor: The Dark World in 2013, Guardians of the Galaxy in 2014,[54] Doctor Strange around 2017,[55] and Ant-Man and the Wasp in 2018 before Infinity War.[56] Spider-Man: Far From Home begins eight months after Endgame in 2024.[57]
The Multiverse Saga
Many of the properties in Phase Four are set after the events of Avengers: Endgame. WandaVision is set three weeks after the events of that film,[58] and directly sets up Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness;[59] The Falcon and the Winter Soldier is set six months after Endgame.[60] Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings is also set after Endgame during the days leading to the Qingming Festival in early April,[61][62] with She-Hulk: Attorney at Law set "a relatively short amount of time" after Shang-Chi.[63][64] Eternals takes place around the same time as The Falcon and the Winter Soldier and Spider-Man: Far From Home, six to eight months after Endgame in 2024,[65][66] while Spider-Man: No Way Home begins immediately after Far From Home, and continues over late 2024.[67] Hawkeye takes place one year after the events of Endgame during the 2024 Christmas season.[68][69]
The
In Phase Five, Echo is set five months after Hawkeye, in May 2025.[90] Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is set in 2026,[91] around the same time as the events of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever and the beginning of Ms. Marvel.[92] Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is set after the Holiday Special.[80] Secret Invasion is set in the "present day" of the MCU,[93] thirty years after the events of Captain Marvel around 2026, after the events of Far From Home and Wakanda Forever.[94][91] The Marvels is set in 2026, after Secret Invasion and Ms. Marvel.[95]
Codifying attempts
Phase One infographic (May 2012)
External image | |
---|---|
The Phase One Timeline infographic released by Marvel in May 2012[4] |
Marvel released an official infographic timeline for their Phase One films and One-Shots in May 2012 in its The Art of Marvel's The Avengers book;[4] some of this information had previously been revealed in the official canon tie-in comic Fury's Big Week, which had confirmed that The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man 2, and Thor all took place within a week, a year before The Avengers.[3] The infographic timeline's scale is shown in relation to Tony Stark revealing he is Iron Man at the end of Iron Man, with events set "BIM" (Before Iron Man) and "AIM" (After Iron Man).[96]
Marvel Studios: The First 10 Years timeline (November 2018)
Content[15] | |
---|---|
1943–1945 | Captain America: The First Avenger |
2010 | Iron Man |
2011 | Iron Man 2, Thor |
2012 | The Avengers, Iron Man 3 |
2013 | Thor: The Dark World |
2014 | Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Guardians of the Galaxy, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 |
2015 | Avengers: Age of Ultron, Ant-Man |
2016 | Captain America: Civil War |
2016–2017 | Doctor Strange |
2017 | Black Panther, Thor: Ragnarok, Avengers: Infinity War |
In November 2018, a timeline specifying dates for the events in each film released to that point was included as part of the sourcebook Marvel Studios: The First 10 Years, celebrating the 10-year anniversary of the MCU.[15] This timeline ignores the two "eight-year" continuity errors as seen in Homecoming, but also contradicts the events of Black Panther and Infinity War by placing them in 2017.[97] The Incredible Hulk, Spider-Man: Homecoming, and Ant-Man and the Wasp are discussed in the sourcebook, but their events are not included in the timeline.[15]
Disney+ timeline (October 2020–present)
The initial Disney+ timeline order in October 2020 was Captain America: The First Avenger, Captain Marvel, Iron Man, Iron Man 2, Thor, The Avengers, Thor: The Dark World, Iron Man 3, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Guardians of the Galaxy, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Avengers: Age of Ultron, Ant-Man, Captain America: Civil War, Black Panther, Doctor Strange, Thor: Ragnarok, Ant-Man and the Wasp, Avengers: Infinity War, and Avengers: Endgame. The Incredible Hulk, Spider-Man: Homecoming, and Spider-Man: Far From Home were excluded at this time since Disney did not have their distribution rights.[98]
In June 2022, Homecoming became available on Disney+ in the United Kingdom and Australia,[99][100] while Far From Home became available on Disney+ in Japan the following month;[101] both were added to the Disney+ timeline in those territories.[102][101][103] By August 2022, The Incredible Hulk was added to the Disney+ timeline in territories it was available in such as Spain and Japan.[103] Homecoming became available in the United States and was added to the timeline in May 2023.[104] Marvel Studios regained the distribution rights to The Incredible Hulk in June 2023, with it subsequently made available in the United States on Disney+.[105][106] Far From Home became available in the United States in November 2023.[107]
To coincide with Echo's release in January 2024, all of Marvel's Netflix television series–including Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, Iron Fist, The Defenders, and The Punisher–were added to the Disney+ timeline,[108] after they were made available on the platform in 2022.[109] The series' placements were initially based on when their first seasons took place,[108] with each season taking place on the timeline around the same time of their release.[110] The first season of Daredevil is set after the events of The Avengers,[110] and was placed after Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 and I Am Groot and before Age of Ultron on the timeline. Jessica Jones's first season is set after that and is placed before Age of Ultron and Ant-Man.[29][110] The second season of Daredevil takes place around six months after its first season, either around or shortly after the events of Ant-Man.[110] The first season of Luke Cage picks up a few months after Jessica Jones,[111] and part of the season takes place simultaneously with the events of Daredevil season 2.[112] It was placed after Ant-Man on the timeline, and is followed shortly after by Iron Fist's first season,[110] which references the events of Daredevil season 2 throughout the season,[113] and was placed between Ant-Man and Civil War. These were followed by the events of the crossover series The Defenders,[110] which takes place a few months after Daredevil's second season,[114] and a month after Iron Fist season one,[115] while being placed before Civil War on the timeline.[110] The Defenders sets up elements of the second season of Jessica Jones,[116] but it does not have a clear placement in the timeline,[110] while Luke Cage season 2, Iron Fist season 2, Daredevil's third season, and Jessica Jones's third season are also set after The Defenders.[110] The Punisher begins after the events of Daredevil season 2 before jumping ahead six months later,[117][118] and was described as a stand-alone series, outside of the series leading up to The Defenders.[119] Its first season also depicts some events from before the second season of Daredevil, which The Punisher star Jon Bernthal described as being "loose with chronology",[120] and it was placed in-between Homecoming and Doctor Strange on the timeline.[29]
In early February 2024, the Disney+ timeline was updated to include the placement of each season of Marvel Studios' series and the Netflix series along with the creation of a new timeline featuring just the MCU films.[121]
|
The Marvel Cinematic Universe: An Official Timeline (October 2023)
[c] | Content[23] |
---|---|
June 1943–March 1945 | Captain America: The First Avenger |
1946 | Agent Carter[124]: 39 |
Summer 1995 | Captain Marvel |
Early–Spring 2008 | Iron Man |
Spring 2010 | Iron Man 2 & The Incredible Hulk & Thor |
Summer 2010 | The Consultant[124]: 89 |
Spring 2012 | The Avengers, Item 47[124]: 97 |
Fall 2013 | Thor: The Dark World |
December 2013–Early 2014 | Iron Man 3 |
Early 2014 | All Hail the King[124]: 114 |
Spring 2014 | Captain America: The Winter Soldier |
Summer 2014 | Guardians of the Galaxy, I Am Groot episode 1[124]: 129 |
Fall 2014 | Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, I Am Groot episodes 2–5[124]: 135 |
Spring 2015 | Avengers: Age of Ultron |
Summer 2015 | Ant-Man |
Spring 2016 | Captain America: Civil War |
Spring–Summer 2016 | Black Widow |
Summer 2016 | Black Panther |
Fall 2016 | Spider-Man: Homecoming |
Fall 2016–2017 | Doctor Strange |
Fall 2017 | Thor: Ragnarok |
Spring 2018 | Ant-Man and the Wasp, Avengers: Infinity War |
Fall 2023 | Avengers: Endgame, WandaVision |
Spring 2024 | Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier episodes 1–5[124]: 248–255 |
Summer 2024 | Spider-Man: Far From Home, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier episode 6[124]: 264–267 |
Fall 2024 | She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 1,[124]: 267–268 Eternals, Spider-Man: No Way Home, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness |
December 2024 | Hawkeye |
Spring 2025 | She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episodes 2–3,[124]: 294–295 Moon Knight, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever |
Summer 2025 | She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episodes 4–8[124]: 310–311 |
Fall 2025 | She-Hulk: Attorney at Law episode 9,[124]: 312 Ms. Marvel, Thor: Love and Thunder, Werewolf by Night |
December 2025 | The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special |
In the book The Marvel Cinematic Universe: An Official Timeline, released in October 2023, the timeline for the first four phases of the MCU is detailed,
Timeline
The following diagram represents the Marvel Cinematic Universe timeline for media released by Marvel Studios as well as the Netflix series by Marvel Television. A project's placement on the timeline is determined by explicit date references within it or another project through dialogue (for example, Tony Stark says "Thanos has been inside my head for six years. Since he sent an army to New York..." placing Avengers: Infinity War in 2018) or title cards (for example, Guardians of the Galaxy set in 2014, while Avengers: Endgame dates Thor: The Dark World as being in 2013), with The Marvel Cinematic Universe: An Official Timeline then used to determine placement, followed by the Disney+ timeline if needed. Its placement is meant to represent when the majority of the project occurs.
Loki and What If...? are excluded from the diagram because they occur outside of the main timeline.[81][85][84] Werewolf by Night is also excluded given the special explicitly does not indicate where it takes place in the MCU.[89] Disney+'s timeline order places the first seasons of Loki and What If...? between Avengers: Endgame and WandaVision,[125][126][121] their second seasons after The Marvels,[121] and Werewolf by Night after Love and Thunder;[127] Werewolf by Night is also placed here in The Marvel Cinematic Universe: An Official Timeline.[23]
Commentary
Thomas Bacon of Screen Rant described the Marvel Studios: The First 10 Years timeline as "the closest Marvel has yet come to making an official statement on just when the different MCU events are set", bringing "some sense of balance to the MCU continuity", despite some mistakes still present in this timeline.[97] Regarding the initial Disney+ timeline, Bacon felt the placement of Thor: The Dark World between The Avengers and Iron Man 3 and Black Panther after Captain America: Civil War in this timeline corrected "previous issues" with their placement in the First 10 Years timeline, and was glad Disney and Marvel "recognize[d] it's possible to watch these movies in anything other than release order", "legitimiz[ing]" this viewing experience.[98] Julia Alexander at The Verge agreed with Bacon that it "seems like Disney finally understands how [some viewers] want to watch Marvel movies".[19]
With the release of Thor: Love and Thunder on Disney+ in September 2022, Bacon and his colleague Molly Jae Weinstein noted how the film's placement in the timeline order section on the platform seemed incorrect,[128][131] with Bacon saying it made "no sense" given dialogue and events in the film that contradicted this placement, and also pointing out how Shang-Chi and Moon Knight's placements also ignored dating information given in each. Bacon said, "The MCU's timeline is now complicated by the sheer volume of Marvel films and TV shows currently in production, because even Marvel's key decision-makers don't really know quite what order things will be released."[128] Unlike the earlier phases where each new project was the next chronological title in the timeline,[131] Phase Four "has hopped around the timeline with impunity", which in turn made it "rather messy". Bacon added how viewers have noted the Disney+ timeline was "deeply flawed" with "numerous contradictions".[128] With the release of The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special, Bacon believed its placement on the Disney+ timeline "fixed" Love and Thunder's placement, thinking that film should be placed in late 2024 on the timeline. He also pointed out how new projects typically get added to the end of the Disney+ timeline, "even when such placements can't possibly be right".[129] In November 2022, Bacon noted how Far From Home's appearance in the Disney+ timeline between The Falcon and the Winter Soldier and Shang-Chi could not be correct given story points in each of those projects indicating where they fell in the timeline, and hoped Marvel would correct these mistakes as it had done previously with Black Widow and Black Panther.[62]
To coincide with the release of The Marvel Cinematic Universe: An Official Timeline in October 2023, Disney+ adjusted its placement of Shang-Chi on the timeline to be between WandaVision and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, which Aaron Perine of
After all of Marvel Television's Netflix series were added to the Disney+ timeline in January 2024, commentators noted that this extended the total runtime of the MCU by a significant amount,[29][135] as the Netflix series totaled 161 hours of content.[110][29] Rotem Rusak at Nerdist noted that the series' canon status in the MCU had been a subject of debate for several years, and called it a "pretty big deal" that all of the series were added to the franchise's official timeline. She believed this was definitive and sent a "pretty clear message" that the series were canon to the MCU, and that this alleviated concerns that only certain aspects of the series would be carried over into the franchise.[29] IGN's Ryan Dinsdale said this was "the first time" the series were listed as part of the official MCU timeline, and noted this came at a time when the MCU was considered to be bloated after the total runtime of content in Phase Four lasted around 54 hours compared to Phase One's runtime of slightly over 12 hours.[135] Richard Fink and Jack Deegan at MovieWeb considered the Netflix series' timeline easy to follow as it was the same as their release order, which he noted was the same timeline order used by Disney+.[110] Andy Behbakht of Screen Rant felt the series' addition to the timeline was a "change of heart" behind-the-scenes and that it was likely to inspire hope to see other Marvel series officially acknowledged as part of the timeline.[30]
Notes
- ^ a b I Am Groot was originally separated on the Disney+ timeline by its episodes, with episode 1 placed before Guardians of the Galaxy and episodes 2–10 placed after Vol. 2.[123]
- ^ a b Homecoming and Far From Home appearing on the Disney+ timeline is dependent on their availability.[102][104][101]
- ^ The seasonal descriptions featured in this table refer to those in the Northern Hemisphere, as used and noted in the book.[124]: 8
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External links
- Marvel Movies and Shows | Disney+ – Marvel Cinematic Universe Timeline Order
- Every Marvel Movie and TV Show in Order on Disney+ on Marvel.com (Archived January 12, 2024, at the Wayback Machine)
- New MCU Timelines Arrive on Disney+ on Marvel.com (Archived February 9, 2024, at the Wayback Machine)
- Here's How To Watch the Marvel Movies in Order (By Release Date and the MCU Timeline) (Archived August 7, 2023, at the Wayback Machine)
- Timeline on Marvel Cinematic Universe Wiki, an external wiki