Jump to content

Kang the Conqueror

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kang the Conqueror
Textless cover of The Uncanny Avengers #12 (September 2013).
Art by John Cassaday.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearance
Created byStan Lee
Jack Kirby
In-story information
Alter egoNathaniel Richards
SpeciesHuman
Place of originOther Earth, 31st Century
Team affiliationsCouncil of Kangs
Cross-Time Kangs
Partnerships
Abilities
  • Genius-level intellect
  • Master strategist, tactician, and field commander
  • Skilled hand-to-hand combatant
  • Access to advanced technology
  • Highly advanced battle armor that grants:
    • Superhuman strength, speed, stamina, and durability
    • Time travel
    • Telekinesis
    • Energy, hologram and force-field projection
    • Ability to control other forms of technology

Kang the Conqueror (Nathaniel Richards) is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, the character first appeared in Fantastic Four #19 (October 1963) as Rama-Tut, an adversary of the Fantastic Four, before being reinvented as Kang in The Avengers #8 (September 1964),[2] an adversary of the Avengers. A time-traveler, several alternate versions of Kang have appeared throughout Marvel Comics titles over the years, such as Rama-Tut, Immortus, Scarlet Centurion, Victor Timely, Iron Lad, and Mister Gryphon.

Kang the Conqueror has been described as one of Marvel's most notable and powerful villains.[3][4][5][6][7] Kang has made media appearances in animated television and video games. Kang made his live-action debut in the MCU film Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (2023), portrayed by Jonathan Majors, who previously appeared as different versions of the character in the Disney+ series Loki (2021–2023).

Publication history

[edit]

The character who would become best known as Kang first appeared in Fantastic Four #19 (October 1963), by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. This issue introduced the pharaoh Rama-Tut, a criminal from the year 3000 who had travelled back in time and conquered ancient Egypt. It was implied that he was a descendant or future incarnation of Fantastic Four villain Doctor Doom. After a second appearance the following year in Fantastic Four Annual #2 (September 1964), the character appeared again, this time under the identity of Kang, in The Avengers #8 (published the same month), also by Lee and Kirby. This issue also established that Rama-Tut was a younger version of Kang. A decade later, the character of Immortus, previously introduced in Avengers #10 (November 1964), was retroactively established to be a future identity of Kang's in Giant-Size Avengers #3 (February 1975).

Fantastic Four #273 (December 1984) heavily implied that Kang was not descended from Doom, but from Reed Richards' father Nathaniel, via one of Reed's many half-siblings. Building on this, Kang's birth name was revealed to also be "Nathaniel Richards" in What If…? Vol. 2 #39 (July 1992), a fact later incorporated into the primary continuity of the Marvel Universe. However, subsequent publications, such as Avengers Forever #9 (August 1999) and Doctor Doom #6 (March 2020), have continued to present Kang's ancestry as ambiguous, suggesting he may descended from one, both, or neither of the two men, in particular Kristoff Vernard: Doom's adoptive son and a half-sibling of Reed.[8]

Kang featured in an eponymous miniseries in 2021.

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Pre-Kang

[edit]

Nathaniel Richards, a 31st-century scholar and descendant of Reed Richards's time traveling father Nathaniel, becomes fascinated with history and discovers the time travel technology created by Victor von Doom, another possible ancestor of his.[9][10] He then travels back in time to ancient Egypt aboard a Sphinx-shaped timeship and reinvents himself as Pharaoh Rama-Tut, with plans to claim En Sabah Nur—the mutant destined to become Apocalypse—as his heir.[11] The pharaoh's rule is cut short when he is defeated by the time-displaced Fantastic Four.[12] An embittered Nathaniel Richards travels forward to the 20th century where he meets Doctor Doom, whom he believes might be his ancestor.[13] He later designs an armor based on Doom's and, calling himself the Scarlet Centurion, pits the Avengers team against alternate-reality counterparts. He plans to dispose of all of them, but the Avengers manage to force him from the timeline,[14] where a divergent version of him becomes Victorex Prime, archenemy of the Squadron Supreme.[15]

Nathaniel then tries to return to the 31st century, but overshoots by a thousand years, discovering that humanity has ruined the Earth through endless conflict using advanced weapons they no longer understand. He finds it simple to conquer the planet, expanding his dominion throughout the galaxy, and reinvents himself as Kang the Conqueror. But this future world is dying, and so he decides to take over an earlier, more fertile Earth.[16][17]

Early appearances and Ravonna

[edit]

On Nathaniel's first foray into the 20th century under the Kang identity, he meets and battles the Avengers, capturing everyone but the Wasp and Rick Jones, and informs the world that they have 24 hours to surrender to him. Jones and some friends pretend they want to help Kang, but double-cross him once they gain access to his ship, and the Avengers are freed. In an attempt to stop them, Kang releases radiation that only beings from his time are immune to, but Thor uses his hammer to absorb the rays and send them back at the warlord so even he cannot withstand it, and he is forced to escape.[17] He later attempts to defeat the Avengers using a Spider-Man robot, but the real Spider-Man destroys it.[18]

In his own time, Kang falls for the princess of one of his subject kingdoms, Ravonna, who does not return his feelings. In an attempt to demonstrate his power, he kidnaps the Avengers and, after several escape attempts on their part, subdues them and the rebellious kingdom with the help of his army. When Kang refuses to execute Ravonna, his commanders revolt and he frees the Avengers to fight with him against them. They successfully subdue them, but not before Ravonna is mortally wounded when she leaps in front of a blast meant for Kang, realizing she does love him after all. Kang returns the Avengers to their present,[19] and places Ravonna's body in stasis.

Kang appears in modern-day as he attempts to retrieve a rogue Growing Man construct who is growing larger with every blow. Both Thor and the police are not able to subdue the giant, until Kang appears from a time machine disguised as a boulder. He fires a ray, shrinking and subduing the Growing Man to doll-sized so he can be "re-hidden".[20] He later reactivates the Growing Man to kidnap an incapacitated Tony Stark and draw the Avengers into his game, though the purpose is not revealed. Thor fails to keep Kang from escaping into the time-stream.[21]

In hopes of restoring his love to life, Kang enters a wager with the cosmic entity Grandmaster, using the Avengers as pawns in a game which, if won, can temporarily grant him power over life and death.[22] The first round ends in stalemate when an unaware Black Knight intervenes and prevents a clear victory by the Avengers, although the team definitively wins the second round. Due to the first round's stalemate, Kang does not earn the power of both life and death but is forced to choose. He selects the power of death over the Avengers, but is stopped by the Black Knight, who, not being an Avenger at the time, is unaffected.[23]

Next Kang kidnaps the Hulk and sends him to 1917 France to kill the Phantom Eagle before he can destroy a giant German cannon which would otherwise kill Banner's grandfather who is fighting in the trenches. This would prevent the Hulk from existing and consequently, the formation of the Avengers. However, the Hulk destroys the cannon which sends him back to the present while Kang is projected into the Limbo.[24]

The Celestial Madonna

[edit]

Some time later Kang reappears at Avengers Mansion seeking the "Celestial Madonna", who turns out to be Mantis, desiring to marry her as she is apparently destined to have a powerful child. The heroes are aided by a future version of Kang, who, tired of conquest, had returned to ancient Egypt and his identity of Rama-Tut, ruling benevolently for ten years before placing himself in suspended animation to revive in the 20th century, desiring to counsel and change his younger self. While Kang is successfully foiled, Rama-Tut is unable to prevent the accidental death of the Avenger the Swordsman.[25] During an adventure in Limbo, it is revealed that Immortus is the future incarnation of both Kang and Rama-Tut.[26]

While attempting to travel to the time of the Crusades, Hawkeye accidentally comes across Kang, sending both to the Old West. The warlord begins to develop a stronghold to conquer the 19th century, thus also conquering the present. Aided this time by Immortus, the Avengers, with some assistance from the Two-Gun Kid, confront Kang. While trying to muster the strength to defeat Thor, Kang overloads his armor and destroys himself, apparently erasing Immortus and Rama-Tut from existence.[27]

Prime Kang and creation of alternate selves

[edit]

Years later, the Beyonder plucks a living Kang from the timestream to participate on the villains' side in the first of the Secret Wars.[28] Soon after, it is revealed that while Kang had indeed died, his constant time-traveling had created a number of alternate Kangs. The Kang to discover this had been drawn to Limbo after his time-travel vehicle was destroyed by Thor. Finding Immortus' remains inside his fortress, Kang assumes the "Lord of Time" to be deceased and discovers the alternate versions of himself using viewing devices he finds, although he does not realize that Immortus is also a version of himself. At one point, he brings Ravonna to Limbo from the moment before her death, unintentionally creating an alternate reality where he was slain. Determined to be the only Kang, he joins with two particularly cunning divergents whom he determines he cannot easily eliminate, the three forming a council that systematically destroys the other alternate versions. He destroys one of the other two Kangs, then brings in the Avengers as part of a plot to destroy the other one, although the latter Kang eventually discovers the plot. This Kang is delayed by Ravonna, who tells him that if he truly loves her he must not kill the first Kang, but he ignores her, goes after him anyway, and is destroyed. Immortus then reveals he faked his death and manipulated everything from behind the scenes. Now only the one "Prime" Kang remains, who Immortus tricks into absorbing the memories of all the slain Kangs, which drives him insane. Immortus then sends the Avengers back to their own timeline.[29]

This Kang diverges into two alternate Kangs,[30] and one is invited to join the Crosstime Kang Corps (or the "Council of Cross-Time Kangs"), which consists of a wide range of Kangs from multiple timelines who are searching for a Celestial "Ultimate Weapon". This Kang calls himself "Fred" (by his own admission a humorous nod to Fred Flintstone, with a prehistoric name being appropriate for a time-traveler) and has a brief encounter with the Avengers while trying to stop the space pirate Nebula from interfering with a timeline.[31] The Prime Kang, having recovered, then attempts to manipulate the Avengers from a time vortex,[32] and encounters the Fantastic Four in a bid to capture Mantis and use her to defeat a Celestial and the other Kangs,[33] while "Fred" is incinerated by a Nebula-possessed Human Torch during a later battle with the Fantastic Four in the timestream.[34]

New Empire, Avengers Forever, and Young Avengers

[edit]

Later, the Prime Kang appears, captures the Vision, and battles both the Avengers and a new foe, Terminatrix, who is revealed to be a revived Ravonna. Kang is critically injured when he intercepts a blow from Thor's hammer Mjolnir that was meant for his old love, who is distraught over his sacrifice and teleports away with him.[35] Terminatrix places Prime Kang in stasis to heal his injuries and assumes control of his empire. However, she finds the empire under attack by a chronal being called Alioth, and is forced to summon the Avengers to assist. She revives Kang, who assists the Avengers in defeating Alioth, but not before allowing the entity to kill the entire Crosstime Kang Corps.[36]

In Avengers Forever, flashbacks reveal that many of Kang's recent actions were motivated by more of a desire to do something rather than a genuine desire for power, and that Rama-Tut is his past and future self; feeling listless and trapped by the burdens of the empire he has created, Kang at one point returned to life as Rama-Tut for a more simple life where he did not have a vast empire to administer. However, as Kang prepares to become Rama-Tut once again and from there Immortus, he glimpses the future and learns of Immortus's servitude to the Time-Keepers of the Time Variance Authority, renewing his horror at the destiny that awaits him as that 'simpering academic'.[30] As a result, Kang rejects this future to the point of aiding the Avengers in protecting Rick Jones from Immortus's latest scheme.[37] When Immortus betrays the Time Keepers to try and save the Avengers, they kill him and attempt to turn Kang into Immortus before Rama-Tut became Immortus. However, the temporal backlash of Kang's strength of will in a temporally unstable environment causes Immortus and Rama-Tut to split off from Kang, essentially making them both clear alternate versions of Kang rather than Immortus being Kang's definitive future. With the weakened Time Keepers destroyed, Kang rejoices in his freedom from the destiny of Immortus and Rama-Tut, as he has now technically become them while still being himself.[38]

After some months, Kang embarks on an ambitious scheme to conquer the Earth, this time aided by his son Marcus, who uses the "Scarlet Centurion" alias. Kang promises any who aid him on Earth a place in his new order, which puts Earth's defenses and the Avengers under strain as they fight off villain after villain. He then takes control of Earth's defense systems, and forces a surrender after destroying Washington, D.C., killing millions. The Avengers continue to battle the forces of Kang's new empire, and Captain America eventually defeats him in personal combat. Although imprisoned, Kang is freed by his son, revealed to be only one of a series of clones, and kills clone Marcus for betraying him by assisting Warbird during the invasion and keeping it secret despite multiple opportunities to admit the truth; while Kang could tolerate the treachery if it allowed Marcus to become his own man, he cannot tolerate a traitor who remains active in his ranks. Depressed at his new loss, Kang retreats from Earth.[39]

At some point, Kang travels back to his own past to prevent an incident where a confrontation with a bully left him in a coma for a year, but meeting his future self so horrifies Kang's past self that he steals Kang's armor and retreats to the past, using an emergency protocol created by the Vision to recruit a new team that come to be known as the 'Young Avengers'. This team consists of teenagers with ties to the Avengers' history, such as Hulking- the Kree/Skrull hybrid son of Captain Mar-Vell and a Skrull princess- Wiccan and Speed- the children of the Scarlet Witch and the Vision reborn as teenagers- and Cassie Lang- daughter of the second Ant-Man-, with the young Kang adopting the alias of 'Iron Lad' using technology stolen from his future self to imitate a variation of Iron Man's armor. When Kang tracks his younger self to the past, the Young Avengers are able to kill him, but the subsequent changes to history force the young Kang to return to his time and erase his memory of these events, although the Young Avengers remain as a team with Iron Lad's armor now self-operating with a consciousness based on an amalgamation of Iron Lad and the Vision.[40]

Kang travels the multi-verse and recruits Stryfe, Earth-X Venom (May "Mayday" Parker), Doom 2099, Iron Man 2020, Ahab, Magistrate Braddock, and Abomination Deathlok to save the multi-verse and possibly restore the universes that have already been erased.[41] He appears to the remaining members of the Avengers Unity Squad after Earth has been destroyed by a Celestial leaving only the mutants. Temporal barriers prevent Kang simply travelling back himself, but he is able to help the surviving Unity Squad members project their minds back into their past selves so that they can defeat the Celestial that attacked Earth.[42] Kang subsequently attempts to steal the Celestials' power for himself,[43] requiring Sunfire and Havok to put themselves at risk by absorbing some of his energy themselves so that they can force him to expend his stolen power.[44]

Uncanny Inhumans and All-New, All-Different Marvel

[edit]

Before the Inhuman king Black Bolt destroys the city of Attilan to release Terrigen Mist throughout the world, he sends his son Ahura away for Kang to foster. Black Bolt later releases a small amount of Terrigen Mist to activate Ahura's terrigenesis and activate his Inhuman ability. While Ahura is going through the change, Black Bolt asks Kang to save his son from the coming end of all things, which Kang agrees to on the condition that the son remain permanently in his care.[45]

While taunting the Inhumans' efforts to find Ahura,[46] another Kang emerges under the alias of "Mister Gryphon", claiming that he has become splintered into various alternate versions of himself as a result of recent temporal disruptions. With this Kang confined to the present, he mounts a massive assault on the Avengers with the aid of Equinox and a reprogrammed Vision, intending to use Mjolnir's time-traveling ability to return to his era, but is defeated.[47]

When Vision abducts Kang's infant self in an attempt to defeat him, the latter, split into increasingly divergent versions of himself by the fractured state of time, retaliates by attacking various Avengers in their infant states. A possible future version of Kang saves key Avengers from his past self's attack by bringing them into Limbo until Hercules acquires an amulet from a former Fate that protects him from Kang's assault. During a battle inside a temple in Vietnam, the Wasp goes to place baby Kang back where he belongs. Kang is subsequently defeated.[48]

During the "Infinity Countdown" storyline, Kang the Conqueror gains knowledge of the calamity that would come if the Infinity Gems were to be gathered in the same location again. To prevent this from occurring, he abducts Adam Warlock, convinces him to help secure the Soul Gem in exchange for the Time Gem, and sends him back in time to receive counsel from Kang's Rama-Tut counterpart.[49]

Fresh start and Kang the Conqueror solo series

[edit]

Kang the Conqueror has most recently been seen as a recurring character in the "Pottersville" arc of the Doctor Doom solo series, in which he is shown to be tethered to Doom in a quantum entanglement, appearing at random times throughout the series conversing with the Latverian despot.[50] This is later revealed to be a ploy by Kang, as by aiding Doom in saving the world Kang is actually making the world easier for himself to conquer in two hundred years' time.[51] In the solo series Kang the Conqueror, Kang rewrites history by manipulating a younger version of him to go through all of his previous identities – Iron Lad, Scarlet Centurion, Pharaoh Rama-Tut, and finally Kang – into becoming the purest form of would-be conqueror, resurrecting Ravonna by giving her the ability of reincarnation.[52]

During the "Venom War" storyline, it was revealed that Kang the Conqueror created the Ruckus Symbiote from a sample of Bedlam (a possible future version of Eddie Brock), which was used by Normie Osborn. When Flexo starts attacking Eddie Brock using tactics given to him by Doctor Doom, Kang's pre-recorded message activates as Normie drags Flexo out of Grand Garden Arena.[53]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

Kang has no superhuman abilities but is an extraordinary genius, an expert historical scholar, and a master physicist (specializing in time travel), engineer, and technician. He is armed with 40th-century technology, wearing highly advanced battle armor that enhances his strength, is capable of energy, hologram, and force-field projection, has a 30-day supply of air and food, and is capable of controlling other forms of technology. Courtesy of his "time-ship", Kang has access to technology from any century, and he once claimed his ship alone could destroy the Moon.[17]

As Rama-Tut, he used an "ultra-diode" ray gun that was able to sap the wills of human beings. At a high frequency, it is able to weaken superhuman beings and prevent use of their superpowers. They can be freed from its effects if the gun is fired at them a second time.

Temporal selves

[edit]

There are different variations of Kang the Conqueror:

Pharaoh Rama-Tut

[edit]

Pharaoh Rama-Tut was Kang's original alias when he ruled ancient Egypt.[12] Later in life, he retires as Kang, returns to the Rama-Tut identity, and helps the Avengers defeat his past self when he attempts to capture the "Celestial Madonna".[25] He nearly surrenders to destiny to become Immortus, but changes his mind and returns to the Kang identity when he discovers that Immortus is a pawn of beings called the Time-Keepers.[30]

Immortus

[edit]

Immortus is a future version of Kang who resides in Limbo. Kang was destined to become him until the last issue of the Avengers Forever series, in which powerful beings called the Time Keepers unintentionally separate the former from the latter.

Iron Man

[edit]

An alternate universe variant of Kang was an inhabitant of the far future of Earth-6160. After remaking the universe in his image, the Maker travels to the future to learn if his influence would last and meets Kang, who is implied to be Tony Stark.[54]

Iron Lad

[edit]

Iron Lad is an adolescent version of Kang who learned of his future self when Kang tried to prevent a childhood hospitalization. Attempting to escape his destiny, the teen Nate Richards steals his future self's advanced armor and travels back to the past, forming the Young Avengers to help him stop Kang. When his attempt to reject his destiny results in Kang's death, the resulting destruction caused by the changes in history forces Iron Lad to return to his time and undo the damage by becoming Kang.[55]

Victor Timely

[edit]

A divergent version of Kang establishes a small, quiet town called Timely, Wisconsin in 1901 to serve as a 20th-century base, where he occasionally resides as Mayor Victor Timely. Posing as his son Victor Timely Jr., he develops an interest in visiting college graduate Phineas Horton and provides him with knowledge that leads to him creating the original Human Torch.[56]

Vision (Jonas)

[edit]

The Vision is a fusion of the old Vision's operating systems and the armor of adventurer Iron Lad, a teenage version of Kang the Conqueror who arrives in the present. Through this merger, Iron Lad is able to access plans the Vision had created in the event of the Avengers' defeat. He uses these plans to assemble a new team of "Young Avengers". When Iron Lad is forced to remove his armor to stop Kang the Conqueror from tracking him, the Vision's operating system causes the armor to become a sentient being.[citation needed] When Iron Lad leaves the time period, he leaves the armor behind with the Vision's operating system activated.[volume & issue needed]

The new Vision opts to stay with the Young Avengers and serve as a mentor for them, though it is later revealed that (due to having Iron Lad's brainwave patterns as the basis for his personality) he is with the group due to his growing feelings of affection towards Cassie Lang, the superhero known as Stature.[57] After the events of the "Civil War" storyline, the Vision travels the world posing as different people in order to gain a better understanding of who he is. He then finds Cassie and declares his love, and states he has adopted the name "Jonas".[58] During a later battle between the alien Skrulls and the Avengers, the Vision is shot through the head.[59] He survives and joins with Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. alongside the other Young Avengers.[60]

He joins the new lineup of the Mighty Avengers, along with Stature.[61] They opt to keep their dual memberships in the Avengers and the Young Avengers a secret, in order to hunt for the Scarlet Witch (really Loki in disguise), who arranged for the roster to form. They ultimately tell their teammates this when Loki reveals his impersonation of Wanda and confront him. When Steve Rogers was sent travelling back and forth across his timeline, he is able to pass on a message to the Avengers in the present by briefly isolating himself with the Vision during the Kree-Skrull War and asking him to pass on a time-delayed message, which Jonas was able to access and share with the other Avengers. When the Mighty Avengers ultimately disbands following the events of the "Siege", Jonas and Cassie rejoin the Young Avengers full-time.[volume & issue needed]

In Avengers: Children's Crusade, Cassie is killed by Doctor Doom, and Iron Lad decides to take her body into the future to be revived. Jonas protests, reasoning that such an action is more in line with Kang's manipulation of time than what Cassie would want, and Iron Lad murders him in a fit of jealous anger. Although his teammates contemplate rebuilding him, they decide against it, both because they lack the 30th-century technology to do so and because, even with their access to his back-ups, the lack of a back-up immediately prior to his death would mean that they would have to tell him about Cassie's death all over again. Kate, Cassie's best friend, prefers to believe that he and Cassie are somehow together wherever they are now.[62]

Doctor Doom

[edit]

When an alliance of the founding Avengers -- Thor, Giant-Man, Wasp, Hulk, and Iron Man; Avengers from the past -- Captain America, Black Knight, Captain Marvel, She-Hulk, Namor; the present day Avengers -- Hercules, Wasp, Captain America, Thor, Spider-Man, Vision; and the Future-Vision; had all traveled back through time to alter Kang's past, and were attacking Kang's Fortress, they were suddenly confronted by Kang's future selves including the Scarlet Centurion and Immortus. The Avengers could spot Doctor Doom among them, who claimed that the Avengers had "cornered" them at a point where their powers were at their greatest, which implied that this Doctor Doom was actually a future Kang, too.

While these future incarnations of Kang erased the other Avengers from the timestream, Giant-Man was able to flee and gather the Chronal Energy Container, a device used by Kang's alien miners to mine time by robbing life forms of their future. Giant-Man then used it to trap the Kangs, which allowed the other Avengers to return to existence. Afterward the Future-Vision used the Chronal Energy Container to send all Avengers back to their own times while erasing their memories save for his past self and the present day Avengers team. He then stayed to guard the imprisoned Kangs at the End of Time.[63]

Scarlet Centurion

[edit]

Numerous versions/relatives of Kang have assumed this alias, typically with a penchant for death games (setting teams of heroes against one another):

  • Nathaniel Richards the Second, in a one-time identity he assumed after being the Pharaoh Rama-Tut but before going on to become Kang.[64]
  • Marcus Kang aka Marcus XXIII, the son of Kang the Conqueror who was active during Avengers Forever.[65]
  • A version of Kang who remained the Scarlet Centurion and conquered the alternate universe Earth-712.[66]

Victorex Prime

[edit]

Victorex Prime is a divergent version of the Scarlet Centurion who retained the identity and never became Kang, instead taking over the future of the Squadron Supreme's universe of Earth-712, in the 40th century.[30][67] On becoming bored with his success and dictatorship over a total of fifteen moons and planets, Victorex Prime elects to invade the past for further conquests, coming into conflict with the Squadron Supreme by sending "temporal hard light holograms" of his Scarlet Centurion form to the past to fight on his behalf, and bringing a number of the team to his time in order to compete in death games, serving as the champions of the Earth-616 Grandmaster against Victorex Prime's own Institute of Evil. On losing, Victorex Prime inadvertently inspires the Grandmaster to issue similar challenges to other divergent versions of Kang.[68]

While arranging for his fourth invasion into the past, sending a holographic envoy of his Scarlet Centurion form ahead of him as herald, Victorex Prime is left shaken when Hyperion, "not in the mood" for battle, while mourning a loss, informs him that while he has been allowed to live on his previous defeats, he will be executed if he attempts to invade the past when any members of the team are mourning as per the historical record, and that he would slowly kill Victorex Prime personally should he break these rules. Daunted, Victorex Prime flees to the future, resorting to subtle ways to mess with the Squadron by interfering with Tom Thumb's attempts to develop a cure for cancer (and all other diseases, as well as ageing), before succumbing to depression, having conquered everything in the past, present, and future, after a temporal bubble emerges around the late 20th century and surrounding decades, preventing him from visiting the time.[68]

Thirty-five years later, still unchallenged and unfulfilled, Victorex Prime's followers discover a crack in the temporal bubble, displaying a massive humanoid hand emerging from space and growing large enough to engulf the Earth, the Sun, and all of space itself. Emboldened by this new challenge, and once again able to access the past, Victorex Prime sends a new temporal hologram backwards in time to confer with the Master Menace, the greatest criminal scientist of his age, simultaneously with Hyperion seeking out the scientist. Reached a reluctant truce, the Master Menace conceives of a device for Hyperion to use stop the entity's spread over the next ten hours, while Victorex Prime transports Master Menace to his future, where he spends fifteen years perfecting his work before returning the completed device to Hyperion less than an hour after leaving. Holographically accompanying Master Menace and the Squadron Supreme as they journey into space to confront the entity, Victorex Prime realises he enjoys the excitement of being a superhero instead of a supervillain, and holographically accompanies Master Menace and the Squadron Supreme as they journeyed out into space to confront the entity.[69]

However, on calculating the present is diverging from his own future, and seeking to preserve his former foes on the failure of Master Menace's device, Victorex Prime retrieves the all-powerful telepath known as the Overmind, believing his power could turn back the entity. After Overmind instead has his head exploded, a terrified Victorex Prime dejectedly admits defeat, and prepares to flee to his future. At the last moment, Arcanna Jones begs Victorex Prime to save the life of her infant son, Benjamin Thomas Jones, which after a moment of consideration, Victorex Prime refuses. With the crack in the temporal bubble sealing shut after returning to the 40th century. Immediately regretting his decision, and unaware of the Squadron's fates, Victorex Prime spends the remaining 211 years of his life in abject misery, unaware that the Squadron survived, because of his decision to leave Benjamin behind (who swapped fates with the entity and reversed its annihilation across multiple universes), and deeming the day he left the Squadron behind to die as "the key moment" that he "lost his nerve", living on in the shame of retreat rather than facing the unknown alongside the worthiest of former foes, and eventually dying of old age, unfulfilled, without the knowledge he coveted most in the world.[69]

Chronomonitor #616

[edit]

Chronomonitor #616 is a variation of Kang the Conqueror who works for the Time Variance Authority (TVA), inducted into the organization on his first attempt to travel back in time. A renegade Chronomonitor from the organization, he is stripped of his power after interfering with history for personal gain as part of a mid-life crisis before escaping custody and killing and replacing a version of himself as Rama-Tut. Ultimately, Chronomonitor #616 is trapped in a time loop by the TVA, swearing revenge upon them and the Fantastic Four.[70]

Mister Gryphon

[edit]

Qeng Gryphon, or simply Mister Gryphon, is a variation of Kang the Conqueror that is confined to the present. He is the CEO of Qeng Enterprises.[47]

He Who Remains

[edit]

He Who Remains is a older variant of Kang the Conqueror and is the final director of the Time Variance Authority at the Citadel at the End of Time, the last reality of the Multiverse.[71]

Crosstime Kang Corps

[edit]

Numerous versions/successor of Kang form the members of this organization, also known as the Council of Cross-Time Kangs:

Reception

[edit]

Critical response

[edit]

George Marston of Newsarama ranked Kang the Conqueror 2nd in their "Best Avengers Villains Of All Time" list.[4] IGN ranked Kang the Conqueror 16th in their "Top 25 Marvel Villains" list,[72] and 65th in their "Top 100 Comic Book Villains" list.[5] Marco Vito Oddo of Collider ranked Kang the Conqueror 20th in their "20 Most Powerful Marvel Characters" list.[6]

Screen Rant included Kang the Conqueror in their "Marvel: The Avengers Main Comic Book Villains, Ranked From Most Laughable To Coolest" list,[73] in their "10 Best Spider-Ham Villains" list,[74] in their "10 Most Powerful Avengers Villains In Marvel Comics" list,[7] and in their "15 Most Powerful Black Panther Villains" list.[75] CBR.com ranked Kang the Conqueror 2nd in their "Black Knight's 10 Strongest Villains" list,[76] 3rd in their "10 Most Violent Marvel Villains" list,[77] 4th in their "10 Fantastic Four Villains We Want To See In The MCU" list,[78] 7th in their "13 Most Important Marvel Villains" list,[3] 8th in their "10 Greatest Iron Man Enemies" list,[79] and 10th in their "Ms. Marvel's 10 Best Villains" list.[80]

Other versions

[edit]

Heroes Reborn

[edit]

An alternate universe variant of Kang the Conqueror appears in Heroes Reborn. This version is the lover of Mantis. Seeking to prove his love for her, he travels to the present to battle and capture the Avengers.[volume & issue needed] However, they eventually free themselves and defeat him.[volume & issue needed] Kang and Mantis subsequently flee to Peru to plot revenge, only to be absorbed by Loki.[volume & issue needed]

Spider-Geddon

[edit]

An alternate universe variant of Kang called Kang the Conglomerator appears in Edge of Spider-Geddon #1.[81] This version is a businessman from the year 2099.

Spider-Ham

[edit]

An alternate universe variant of Kang the Conqueror called Kangaroo the Conqueror appears in Peter Porker, The Spectacular Spider-Ham #15.[82]

Ultimate Marvel

[edit]

A female alternate universe variant of Kang the Conqueror, Sue Storm, appears in the Ultimate Comics: The Ultimates.[83][84]

X-Men/Star Trek

[edit]

An alternate universe variant of Kang the Conqueror appears in the X-Men/Star Trek crossover Second Contact.[85]

Collected editions

[edit]
Title Material collected Published date ISBN
Kang: The Saga Of The Once And Future Conqueror Fantastic Four (vol. 1) #19, Avengers (vol. 1) #8, All-New, All-Different Avengers #13, Avengers (vol. 7) 1–6, Avengers: Back to Basics #5-6, Moon Knight Annual (vol. 2) #1, Symbiote Spider-Man: King in Black #1-5, and material from Fantastic Four (vol. 6) #35, Timeless #1 January 2023 978-1302950675
Avengers: Kang Dynasty Avengers (vol. 3) #41-55, Avengers Annual 2001 January 2002 978-0785109587
Kang the Conqueror: Only Myself Left to Conquer Kang The Conqueror #1-5 February 2022 978-1302930356

In other media

[edit]

Television

[edit]
  • Kang the Conqueror appears in a self-titled episode of The Avengers: United They Stand, voiced by Ken Kramer.[86][87] This version hails from the 41st century, where he was overthrown during a revolution and imprisoned between dimensions, with an obelisk as his only means of escape.
  • Kang the Conqueror appears in The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, voiced by Jonathan Adams.[86][88][89] This version hails from the 41st century. Introduced in the episode "Meet Captain America", Kang's timeline is destroyed in a temporal anomaly, leaving his lover Princess Ravonna comatose and fading from existence. Kang traces the disturbance to Captain America's presence in the 21st century and attacks the Avengers, taking them to his time to show them the devastation he claims Captain America caused. However, Iron Man gains access to Kang's Time Chair and transports everyone back. Injured and defeated, Kang escapes to his flagship, the Damocles, and prepares to conquer Earth with his armada. In the episode "The Kang Dynasty", the Avengers launch an attack against him, boarding the ship and sending most of the armada back to the 41st century. Before they can return Kang's ship, the Wasp discovers what happened to Ravonna and convinces her team to find a way to save her. In the episode "New Avengers", the Council of Kangs frees the original Kang from prison and provides him with new armor, which he uses to take over Stark Tower so he can use its arc reactor to bring his citadel to the 21st century, incidentally causing "time ripples" across New York and scattering the Avengers across time. In response, the New Avengers Protocol is activated and Spider-Man, War Machine, Wolverine, the Thing, Luke Cage, and Iron Fist join forces to defeat Kang, casting him out of the timestream and returning the original Avengers to the present while S.W.O.R.D. repurposes the Damocles as their headquarters.
  • Kang the Conqueror appears in Avengers Assemble,[90] voiced by Steve Blum.[86] This version hails from the 30th century and is an ally of the Cabal.
  • Kang the Conqueror appears in Marvel Future Avengers, voiced by Jiro Saito in the Japanese version and again by Steve Blum in the English dub.[86] This version is the leader of the Masters of Evil and the mastermind behind the Emerald Rain Project, an attempt to reverse-engineer Terrigen Crystals to create a race of superhumans under his control and defeat the Inhumans in his time.

Marvel Cinematic Universe

[edit]

Jonathan Majors portrayed Kang the Conqueror and his alternative variants in media set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe from 2021 to 2023:

  • Kang the Conqueror debuted in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.[91][92] A multiversal traveler in the newly created multiverse who believed that the multiverse was dying due to his variants, he attempted to instigate a war to stop them, only to be captured by the Council of Kangs and exiled to Earth-616's Quantum Realm. There, he met Janet van Dyne and worked with her to fix his ship's energy core and take them both home. After years of failed attempts, they successfully re-powered it, but she learned of his true nature and used her Pym Particles to prevent him from accessing the core before she eventually escaped the Quantum Realm. Despite this, Kang conquered it, built a new empire, swayed Janet's old Quantum Realm friend Lord Krylar to his side, and recruited Darren Cross into his ranks. In 2026, Janet, Hank Pym, their daughter Hope van Dyne, Scott Lang, and his daughter Cassie are transported to the Quantum Realm and got separated. Kang captures the Langs and manipulates Scott into retrieving the core; Scott was successful, but Kang obtains the core and betrays Scott. After Cassie instigates a rebellion against him, Kang engages Scott in battle until Hope helps him knock Kang into the core.
  • In the mid-credits scene of Quantumania, the Council of Kangs, led by Immortus, Rama-Tut, and Centurion, discuss the fate of "The Exiled One" and discuss having to deal with Earth-616.

MCU variants

[edit]
  • He Who Remains debuted in the Loki's first-season finale "For All Time. Always", portrayed by Majors. He was an unnamed former "conqueror" and founder of the Time Variance Authority (TVA) who built a Citadel on top of an asteroid at the end of time. He set the course of actions to happen that allowed the Loki of the parallel universe in the year 2012 and Sylvie to find him. He then revealed that he destroyed the original multiverse and created the TVA to control the flow of the "Sacred Timeline" and prevent a new multiverse from forming due to a vast Multiversal War having broken out in the previous one; after overlooking the timeline for eons, He Who Remains seeks to retire, restoring free will to allow Loki and Sylvie to decide whether to take his place and lead the TVA, or kill him, create a new multiverse, and allow a new Multiversal War to begin. Sylvie chooses to kill He Who Remains, sending Loki back to the TVA.[93] In the second-season premiere "Ouroboros", on time-slipping to the past of the TVA, Loki listens to recording "Chronomonitor #616" of He Who Remains' voice, revealing that eons prior to his death, when he openly ruled the TVA, he had a romance with Ravonna Renslayer, the visuals of which are later shown to Ravonna by Miss Minutes in "Heart of the TVA". In the Loki series finale, Loki time-slips to the moment before Sylvie kills He Who Remains; after thousands of attempts to prevent his death, he tells Loki that the Time Loom is a fail-safe; overloading it protects the Sacred Timeline by deleting the branches along with the TVA. He Who Remains suggests Loki kill Sylvie to save the Loom, which Loki rejects, before He Who Remains wishes him luck down "the road he paved", culminating in Loki destroying the Loom, magically reviving the dying timelines, and rearranging them into a tree-like structure, committing himself to oversee the branches alone at the End of Time in He Who Remains' place, as the TVA recommits themselves to tracking down his variants.
  • Victor Timely first appeared in the post-credits scene of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. He later returned in the second-season of Loki, played again by Majors. He was revealed to be destined to become the new He Who Remains. Additionally, he was born in the 19th Century. As a child, he was given a book about the TVA by He Who Remains' A.I. creation Miss Minutes and former TVA Judge Ravonna Renslayer, which inspired him to become a scientist and attempt to build a Time Loom at the same time that TVA agents Loki and Mobius arrive to bring Victor to the TVA and help them fix their own Loom. After fending off attempts by both Renslayer and Sylvie to kill him, and Miss Minutes to seduce him, Victor goes with Loki and Mobius to the TVA.[94] Discussing the contrasting personality of Timely to other variants, Loki producer Kevin R. Wright said it was "fun" to have Timely be "sort of an eccentric, quiet inventor that maybe is, like, a bit out of time and out of place" rather than the expectation of the origin of the variant who would become Kang "living in the 31st Century" to actually be "some sci-fi villain from the future", instead depicted as having been born in the 19th Century before being brought to the TVA.[95] Nasri Thompson portrays a young Timely.[96]
  • In the Loki series finale, Thompson briefly portrays another young Timely variant, who is shown not to have been left a TVA handbook.

Novels

[edit]

The X-Men/Spider-Man novel trilogy Time's Arrow by Tom DeFalco features a version of Kang as the villain, as he plants the titular "time arrows" at various points in the timestream with the goal of using the accumulated energies to trigger the destruction of all alternate timelines. Kang intends to only preserve one alternate timeline: specifically, he intends to preserve a timeline where Ravonna is still alive. He eventually discovers a suitable timeline, attempting to convince the native Ravonna that the X-Men are responsible for the temporal collapse and he has just found a means to preserve a timeline from their attack. The heroes are able to stop Kang's destruction, culminating in that version of Ravonna being killed when she tries to confront Kang about his lies. The trilogy ends with this Kang psychologically shattered and imprisoned by Ravonna's people, while the reader learns that Kang's mysterious servant, Lireeb, was actually a disguised Immortus, using this scheme to get rid of another alternate Kang and clean up the timelines by removing some of the excess alternate realities.

Video games

[edit]

Miscellaneous

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Misiroglu, Gina Renée; Eury, Michael (2006). The Supervillain Book: The Evil Side of Comics and Hollywood. Visible Ink Press. ISBN 9780780809772.
  2. ^ "Who Is Kang the Conqueror? The Marvel History of the MCU's Next Villain, Explained". Nerdist. Archived from the original on April 5, 2023. Retrieved April 5, 2023.
  3. ^ a b Harth, David (March 13, 2022). "The 13 Most Important Marvel Villains, Ranked". CBR. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  4. ^ a b Marston, George (September 19, 2022). "The best Avengers villains of all time". gamesradar. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  5. ^ a b Kang the Conqueror is number 65 Archived October 19, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, IGN.
  6. ^ a b Oddo, Marco Vito; Robbins, Jason (September 28, 2021). "20 Most Powerful Marvel Characters, Ranked". Collider. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  7. ^ a b Harn, Darby (June 27, 2022). "10 Most Powerful Avengers Villains In Marvel Comics". Screen Rant. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  8. ^ Lealos, Shawn S. (July 2, 2018). "Black Sheep: The 20 Most Dangerous Members Of The Fantastic Four Family". CBR. Archived from the original on April 30, 2023. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
  9. ^ Mentioned in The Avengers #11 (Dec. 1964). Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ Fantastic Four #273. Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ The Rise of Apocalypse #1–4 (Oct. 1996 – Jan. 1997). Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ a b Fantastic Four #19 (Sep. 1963). Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ Fantastic Four Annual #2
  14. ^ The Avengers Annual #2 (September 1968). Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ Squadron Supreme #2 (October 1985). Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 101. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  17. ^ a b c Avengers #8 (Sep. 1964). Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ The Avengers #11 (Dec. 1964). Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ The Avengers #23–24 (Dec. 1965–Jan. 1966). Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ Thor #140. Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ The Avengers #69. Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ The Avengers #69–71 (Oct. 1969–Dec. 1969). Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ The Avengers #71 (Dec. 1969). Marvel Comics.
  24. ^ The Incredible Hulk vol. 2 #135 (Jan. 1971). Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ a b The Avengers #129 and Avengers Giant-Size #2 (Nov. 1974). Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ Giant-Size Avengers #3 (Feb. 1975). Marvel Comics.
  27. ^ The Avengers #141–143 (Nov. 1975–Jan. 1976). Marvel Comics.
  28. ^ Secret Wars #1–12 (May 1984 – April 1985). Marvel Comics.
  29. ^ The Avengers #267–269 (May–July 1986). Marvel Comics.
  30. ^ a b c d e Avengers Forever #9. Marvel Comics.
  31. ^ a b c The Avengers #291–297 (May–Nov. 1988). Marvel Comics.
  32. ^ The Avengers #300 (Feb. 1989). Marvel Comics.
  33. ^ Fantastic Four #323–325 (Feb.–Apr. 1989). Marvel Comics.
  34. ^ a b Fantastic Four #337–341 (Feb.–June 1990). Marvel Comics.
  35. ^ Captain America Annual #11; Thor Annual #17; Fantastic Four Annual #26 and The Avengers Annual #21 (1992). Marvel Comics.
  36. ^ The Terminatrix Objective #1–4 (Sep.–Dec. 1993). Marvel Comics.
  37. ^ Avengers Forever #1. Marvel Comics.
  38. ^ Avengers Forever #12. Marvel Comics.
  39. ^ The Avengers #41–55 (Jun. 2001–Aug. 2002); The Avengers Annual 2001. Marvel Comics.
  40. ^ Young Avengers #1-6. Marvel Comics.
  41. ^ Uncanny Avengers #14. Marvel Comics.
  42. ^ Uncanny Avengers #19. Marvel Comics.
  43. ^ Uncanny Avengers #21. Marvel Comics.
  44. ^ Uncanny Avengers #22. Marvel Comics.
  45. ^ The Uncanny Inhumans #0. Marvel Comics.
  46. ^ The Uncanny Inhumans #1. Marvel Comics.
  47. ^ a b All-New, All-Different Avengers #6. Marvel Comics.
  48. ^ The Avengers vol. 7 #1–6 (2016). Marvel Comics.
  49. ^ Infinity Countdown: Adam Warlock #1. Marvel Comics.
  50. ^ Doctor Doom #1. Marvel Comics.
  51. ^ Doctor Doom #5. Marvel Comics.
  52. ^ Kang the Conqueror #1 (August 18, 2021). Marvel Comics.
  53. ^ Venom War #3. Marvel Comics.
  54. ^ Ultimate Invasion #2-4 (2023). Marvel Comics.
  55. ^ Young Avengers #1–6 (2006). Marvel Comics.
  56. ^ The Avengers Annual #21 (January 1992). Marvel Comics.
  57. ^ Young Avengers #11 (May 2006), Marvel Comics.
  58. ^ Young Avengers Presents #4 (April 2008), Marvel Comics.
  59. ^ Secret Invasion #3 (Apr. 2008), Marvel Comics.
  60. ^ Secret Invasion #5 (June 2008), Marvel Comics.
  61. ^ Mighty Avengers #21, Marvel Comics.
  62. ^ Avengers: Children's Crusade #9, Marvel Comics.
  63. ^ Avengers Vol 7 issue 6 (April 2017). Marvel Comics.
  64. ^ What If? #29. Marvel Comics.
  65. ^ The Avengers vol. 3 #38. Marvel Comics.
  66. ^ The Avengers Annual #2. Marvel Comics.
  67. ^ Squadron Supreme (1985). Marvel Comics.
  68. ^ a b Squadron Supreme #9 (May 1986). Marvel Comics.
  69. ^ a b Squadron Supreme: Death of a Universe (October 1989). Marvel Comics.
  70. ^ Marvel Adventures Fantastic Four #23 (August 2007). Marvel Comics.
  71. ^ What If...? Vol 1 39 (May 1992) Marvel Comics.
  72. ^ Schedeen, Jesse; Yehl, Joshua (March 27, 2019). "The Top 25 Marvel Villains". IGN. Archived from the original on October 13, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  73. ^ Atchison, Drew (July 1, 2021). "Marvel: The Avengers Main Comic Book Villains, Ranked From Most Laughable To Coolest". Screen Rant. Archived from the original on November 16, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  74. ^ Taggers, C. M. (June 28, 2021). "10 Best Spider-Ham Villains". Screen Rant. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  75. ^ Harn, Darby (September 25, 2021). "15 Most Powerful Black Panther Villains". Screen Rant. Archived from the original on September 25, 2021. Retrieved October 16, 2022.
  76. ^ Gaudreau, Jared (January 9, 2022). "The Black Knight's 10 Strongest Villains". CBR. Archived from the original on October 25, 2022. Retrieved October 24, 2022.
  77. ^ Harth, David (October 21, 2022). "10 Most Violent Marvel Villains, Ranked". CBR. Archived from the original on November 15, 2022. Retrieved November 15, 2022.
  78. ^ Allan, Scoot (July 29, 2019). "10 Fantastic Four Villains We Want To See In The MCU". CBR. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  79. ^ Eckhardt, Peter (October 29, 2022). "10 Greatest Iron Man Enemies, Ranked". CBR. Archived from the original on November 15, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  80. ^ Hoyle, Brooks (March 11, 2022). "Ms. Marvel's 10 Best Villains, Ranked". CBR. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  81. ^ Edge of Spider-Geddon #1. Marvel Comics.
  82. ^ Peter Porker, The Spectacular Spider-Ham #15 (May 1987). Marvel Comics.
  83. ^ Ultimate Comics: The Ultimates #25
  84. ^ Ultimate Comics: The Ultimates #29. Marvel Comics
  85. ^ Second Contact (1998)
  86. ^ a b c d "Kang the Conqueror Voices (Marvel Universe)". Behind The Voice Actors. December 20, 2019. Archived from the original on November 17, 2022. Retrieved December 20, 2019. Check mark indicates role has been confirmed using screenshots of closing credits and other reliable sources.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  87. ^ Craig, Richard (April 13, 2024). "10 Best Episodes Of The Avengers: United They Stand". ScreenRant. Retrieved October 5, 2024.
  88. ^ Nguyen, Richie (April 15, 2020). "The 10 Best Episodes of Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes (According To IMDb)". CBR. Retrieved October 5, 2024.
  89. ^ "Twitter / Christopher Yost: @VenomMelendez Maria Hill". Twitter.com. Archived from the original on January 26, 2021. Retrieved December 28, 2010.
  90. ^ Ching, Albert (June 1, 2015). "'Ultimate Spider-Man' And 'Avengers' Renewed On Disney XD With New Titles". ComicBookResources.com. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  91. ^ "'Ant-Man 3' Title and Kathryn Newton Casting for MCU Threequel Revealed". Collider. December 11, 2020. Archived from the original on December 11, 2020. Retrieved June 21, 2021.
  92. ^ Casey, Connor (December 10, 2020). "Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania Announced". ComicBook.com. Archived from the original on December 11, 2020. Retrieved December 10, 2020.
  93. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (July 16, 2021). "'Loki' Season One Finale Postmortem: Director & EP Kate Herron On Whether He Who Remains Is Really Immortus". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on July 16, 2021. Retrieved July 16, 2021.
  94. ^ Anderson, Kyle (February 16, 2023). "Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania Ending and Post-Credits Scenes Explained". Nerdist. Archived from the original on February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 18, 2023. ...this post-credits scene is actually a scene from Loki season two.
  95. ^ Polo, Susana (October 19, 2023). "Loki's Victor Timely may seem like a surprise, but he was in the pitch from day one". Polygon. Archived from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
  96. ^ Lacson, Therese (October 19, 2023). "'Loki' Season 2 Episode 3 Recap: A Timely Introduction". Collider. Archived from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
  97. ^ a b Schedeen, Jesse (July 23, 2022). "Jonathan Majors' Kang the Conqueror Explained: Who Is the Ant-Man 3 Villain?". IGN. Archived from the original on November 14, 2022. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  98. ^ "Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2 coming to PC, PS4, Switch, Xbox One". Polygon. May 15, 2017. Archived from the original on May 16, 2017. Retrieved May 16, 2017.
  99. ^ @arthur_parsons (September 7, 2017). "Replying to @GameUnboxing Correct!". Archived from the original on January 25, 2021. Retrieved September 28, 2017.
  100. ^ "New Character - Kang (Classic / The Conqueror)". D3 Go!. February 9, 2023. Archived from the original on October 11, 2023. Retrieved September 23, 2023.
  101. ^ "Vs. Evil by Ookla the Mok". Apple Music. March 12, 2013. Archived from the original on October 20, 2020. Retrieved September 25, 2020.
  102. ^ The Art of Plants vs. Zombies. Dark Horse Comics, 2013.
  103. ^ Cappelli, Tim (January 23, 2017). "Rick and Morty #22". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on March 30, 2017. Retrieved January 23, 2017. Can The Council of Ricks stop Doofus Jerry's before everyone becomes…conquered by a Jerry? Oni Press' Rick and Morty #22 by Kyle Starks & CJ Cannon.
  104. ^ "How to Defeat Kang the Conqueror in Marvel Legendary's Annihilation Game". sharpergamestrategies.com. February 12, 2022. Archived from the original on February 12, 2022. Retrieved February 12, 2022.
[edit]