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After Loki is killed by Thanos, Thor clutches his brother's body as Thanos obliterates the Statesman leaving Thor to die in the open space. Thor survives and is rescued by the Guardians of the Galaxy — Peter Quill , Gamora , Drax the Destroyer , Mantis , Rocket , and Groot — and they tell Thor about Thanos' quest to find the Infinity Stones ...
Mephisto – A demon-lord who rules a Hell dimension and has clashed with Thor on different occasions. Mercurio the 4-D Man – Alien with the ability to generate flames from the right hand and extreme cold from the left. Midgard Serpent – A monstrous snake large enough to coil around the Earth whom Thor is destined to battle during Ragnarök.
Surtur is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly as an enemy of Thor.Based on the fire giant Surtr from Norse mythology, he was adapted by writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby, and first appeared in Journey into Mystery #97 (October 1963).
Thor God-Size Special (December 2008) Thor: Man of War (January 2009) Thor: The Trial of Thor #1 (June 2009) Thor Giant-Size Finale #1 (November 2009) Thor and the Warriors Four #1–4 (April – July 2010) Thor: The Mighty Avenger #1–8 (July 2010 – January 2011) Thor: The Rage of Thor #1 (August 2010) Thor: First Thunder #1–5 (September ...
The Blip ended five years later, in 2023, when the Avengers utilized time travel to collect the Infinity Stones from prior points in the timeline and, with a second snap by Avengers member Bruce Banner, restored all those previously killed by Thanos. Aspects of the Blip have been featured in Phase Three, Four, and Five of the MCU, most notably ...
Mjolnir (UK: / ˈ m j ɒ l n ɪər / MYOL-neer, [2] US: / ˈ m j ɔː l n ɪər / MYAWL-neer), [3] known more formally as Mjölnir, is a fictional magical weapon appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Thor, or The Mighty Thor, is the name of several comic book titles featuring the character Thor and published by Marvel Comics, beginning with the original Thor comic book series which debuted in 1966.
However, shortly after The Avengers released and the studio began to solidify plans for Infinity War, they realized that the gauntlet seen in Thor could not be the actual one, creating an internal theory that it was fake; this resulted in the scene in Ragnarok, which was created "just [to have] the opportunity to call it a fake". [141]