Something nefarious is going on and perhaps even Mobius M. However, it’s hard to believe that the Timekeepers are who they say they are in this series.
Where were the Timekeepers when all of this was going on? They could have stopped the bugs and prevented all of this from happening. Along the way, they lost loved ones, some of them got to go to their home realities and others were killed during missions. Nonetheless, they completed their missions. Both the Exiles and Weapon X had to kill people they loved and help beings they hated (that also resembled beings from their home realities). It wasn’t an easy job physically or emotionally. They were also the things that recruited them. They originally thought they were recruited by the multiverse to repair anomalies but later find out that a group of bug-like beings were the ones that caused the ripple sent throughout reality. The other team, Weapon X, was created to repair the one that needed a brutal touch. The Exiles were brought together to fix broken timelines. But that doesn’t explain the reality-hopping Exiles or their ruthless counterpart Weapon X in the comics. The Timekeepers could still say, “This was meant to happen” – an excuse used when Loki asked about the Avengers time jumping.
#Timekeeper marvel code#
Sure he's also a multiversal entity, and borderline omniscient, but his code of non-interference makes him irrelevant to most of these other forces.Okay, let’s say all of that still proves nothing. I would rank The Watcher at the very bottom. They don't seem to be multiversal, meaning they'd be at the mercy of the Infinity Stones same as anyone, and are not as powerful as Dormammu. I don't know what to make of that.Īrishem and the Celestials are essentially just very, very, very powerful aliens, at least as depicted in the MCU. In What If? they still seem to have power across the multiverse.
#Timekeeper marvel tv#
In the Loki TV show they seem to be all powerful within their own universe but harmless outside of it. The Infinity Stones are hard to pin down. The TVA are also multiversal in nature but I can't picture them throwing down against Dormammu. He's noted to have conquered other dimensions before, meaning he is a multiversal threat.
The basic answer is "we don't know" but you could make some surmises based partly on the comics and partly what we've seen so far.ĭormammu is probably the top dog. I would say, out of the collection, the entire Celestial pantheon under Arishem’s leadership would defeat the rest in combat (again, not counting Uatu since his moral code voids him from the fight).Īssuming there are other Celestials in other universes who fall under Arishem’s dominion, then they are the strongest and therefore Arishem is the supreme authority of the Multiverse. They appear to be able to form galaxies and, to some extent, reconstruct the Universe. The Celestials existed before the Big Bang, so it is clear that they have a Multiverse-wide presence.
#Timekeeper marvel full#
Dormammu would probably defeat an Infinity Gauntlet in an average fight (not counting the one with Dr Strange since he is an incredibly powerful wizard using an artefact to harness the Time Stone’s full power). However, it appears that He Who Remains has technology capable of nullifying their power (as shown in the TVA). But, as I say, the Watcher doesn’t fight so he is kinda void. I would say that Dormammu is probably stronger than He Who Remains in a fight, as well as Uatu the Watcher. Any of the others could crush him.ĭormammu is a multiverse-wide threat (being able to conquer dimensions with ease). You take away his fancy TVA tech and you have a normal human left (sort of like Tony Stark without a suit). Outside the timelines (such as in the Citadel At The End Of Time), he appears to just be a regular guy who, without his technology, is just a normal human. He Who Remains/Kang the Conqueror only has power in terms of timelines. This effectively voids him from the competition. He, unlike Arishem or He Who Remains, isn’t really interested in governing. So he doesn’t really “govern” so much as “observe”. Uatu the Watcher is theoretically the most powerful but he follows the usual watcher code of non-interference which means he is never allowed to interfere with the affairs of other beings unless absolutely necessary.