The Nexus creatures shown in Marvel Comics come from a broad range of backgrounds and span both time and space. Characters inside the Marvel Cinematic Universe have so far been more carefully categorised, but as more films and Disney+ original material are published, it seems certain that this list will continue to grow.
New developments in how that world connects with the MCU appear to be made in Miles Morales’ most recent installment of the hugely popular web-spinning franchise, which also serves as a hub for multimedia Spider-Man Easter eggs and references. The Sony Studios film Across the Spider-Verse, which collaborates with the MCU but doesn’t always ask for permission to include new or associated material, appears to have given Miles a totally new categorization.
Within What If…? A Nexus being is described as a “rare individual entities with the power to affect probabilities –and thus the future” in Uatu the Watcher, Volume 1 #35, written by Roy Thomas and R.J.M. Lofficier, pencilled by Joe Phillips, and inked by Sam DeLarosa. These things disrupt the timestream’s very flow, much like rocks and dams do. They are each referred to as Nexuses. Then Uatu provided a list of creatures that met those requirements.
Characters like Kang the Conqueror, a creature who is fluent in the linked cosmos and has harnessed its energies to serve his technological dominance, would fall under this category in the MCU. The Scarlet Witch, whose innate capabilities allow her to significantly influence probability events and who has strengthened them via studying forbidding arcanum. Last but not least, America Chavez completes the list of MCU-confirmed Nexus creatures as of this writing. America Chavez is a being without a multiversal counterpart who is capable of freely traversing the multiverse.
But according to the theory put forward in Across the Spider-Verse, every Spider-Man serves as the universe’s unique Nexus entity. The whole reality surrounding the canon event Miles shattered in Pavitr Prabhakar’s Mumbattan on Earth-50101 started to disintegrate until Miguel and his multiversal guards intervened. Miles was informed by Miguel that the coherence and stability of each world depend on the presence of Spider-Man.
Uatu continues by describing an Ultimate Nexus in What If…? #35, saying that this person “…was needed to safeguard and control all possible futures, in all possible worlds.” This is Wanda Maximoff, a.k.a. the Scarlet Witch from the Marvel Comics. Currently, there isn’t a single figure in the MCU with so much power, although Miguel articulated the opposite of this job in Across the Spider-Verse when he identified Miles’ position as the first aberration. Miles’ own presence endangers all conceivable futures in all conceivable universes, as opposed to protecting them.
From this vantage point, Spot may be seen as the physical representation of Miles’ multiverse presence as Spider-Man. Spot like the infinite abyss at the centre of existence. As his strength increases, his ability to exert control seems to diminish and his appetite increases, giving rise to an entity that behaves like a black hole that not only eats space-time but also engulfs all of reality. If Miles really is a catalyst variety that causes this, he is unique in all of existence as an unintentional Nihilist Nexus rather than an Ultimate one, similar to America Chavez.
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