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  • Oh, my God.

  • Marvel finally gave us a new trailer

  • for "Spider-Man: Far From Home," and

  • compared to the initial tease, it really

  • sets up a post-"Endgame" MCU.

  • Nick Fury: Beck is from Earth, just not ours.

  • The snap tore a hole in our dimension.

  • Spider-Man: You're saying there's a multiverse?

  • Matt: Yes, that's exactly what the trailer is saying.

  • In the Marvel comics, there exists the multiverse.

  • It's a way to tell alternate stories

  • about characters you're already familiar with

  • that diverge from the main Marvel continuity,

  • but it doesn't affect the main Marvel continuity.

  • Basically, the multiverse is a way of creating

  • and working with ongoing alternate realities.

  • Think of each reality as its own universe

  • with its own timeline.

  • Put them together, and they're the multiverse.

  • If you saw "Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,"

  • you're already familiar with the concept.

  • Each universe has its own quirks with its own heroes.

  • Sometimes there are overwhelming similarities,

  • but usually there are huge differences.

  • For example, the Marvel universe

  • in the comics is referred to as Earth 616.

  • This is the one that has existed for 80 years,

  • and aside from the MCU, it's the one

  • that most people are familiar with.

  • But if a creator wants to tell a different story,

  • say, one where Charles Xavier is murdered

  • at a young age, causing a chain reaction

  • that sees the villain Apocalypse

  • conquer almost the entire world,

  • then an alternate universe is needed.

  • Give it a number, in this case Earth 295,

  • and you're good to go.

  • Tell your story, do whatever you want

  • to the characters, and none of it

  • should affect the main timeline, but more on that later.

  • Now, time travel can and does

  • play a part in these realities.

  • The X-Men are constantly traveling through time

  • to avert possible disaster, whether it's from Sentinels

  • in the legendary "Days of Future Past" story

  • or in the more recent "Old Man Logan."

  • Both storylines took place in dystopian futures

  • with X-Men from present-day Earth 616,

  • but the future events of "Days of Future Past"

  • took place on Earth 811, while the future events

  • of "Old Man Logan" took place on Earth 807,128.

  • It's a way of working with characters you

  • already know and love while adding

  • all sorts of twists, turns, and alternate takes.

  • Hey, I know they later changed "Old Man Logan"

  • to not be the X-Man we're all familiar with,

  • but we'll save retroactive continuity for another video.

  • Now, remember that part about characters from

  • other timelines not affecting the main timeline?

  • Well, that actually gets a little complicated.

  • If a character or something else

  • from an alternate reality is a hit,

  • say, the extremely evil version of Beast

  • from the "Age of Apocalypse," then they'll

  • usually somehow cross through time and space

  • to wind up in the main Marvel reality, Earth 616.

  • Characters from one reality can and do

  • cross over to other realities all the time.

  • One comic, "The Exiles," sees characters

  • from various realities come together

  • as a team to hop from one reality to another,

  • averting disaster and correcting huge mistakes

  • in the timeline.

  • Every single one of their missions

  • could be considered a time heist.

  • Were you asking yourself how Captain America

  • didn't screw up the timeline at the end of "Endgame"?

  • He probably did.

  • There's a good chance him staying behind

  • in the past created a whole new dimension of reality.

  • The main Marvel Cinematic Universe

  • is referred to as Earth 199,999.

  • He could've gone back and stayed behind

  • in what would become, say, Earth 302,481.

  • He would've had to cross over to the main MCU reality

  • to bring Sam the shield, but he just kind of

  • appears on that bench at the end of "Endgame."

  • So, it is possible.

  • The Russo brothers have been pretty adamant

  • this Cap came from another dimension,

  • and since there exists a team of heroes

  • whose job it is to fix mistakes in the timeline,

  • it may be possible we'll see the reality-hopping Exiles

  • on the big screen.

  • Marvel could be setting up the multiverse

  • as a way to bring the Avengers, the X-Men,

  • and the Fantastic Four all together on the big screen.

  • Having each team inhabit its own reality

  • would explain why they've never run

  • into each other before, and it would also

  • explain why, say, the X-Men didn't help defeat Thanos.

  • Now, there's a lot of other stuff

  • that goes along with the multiverse.

  • It's too complicated to get in here,

  • but you should know that Merlin,

  • yes, that Merlin, or his daughter Roma

  • generally serves as the protector of the multiverse.

  • The X-Men offshoot team Excalibur

  • is very linked to the multiverse,

  • and Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four

  • is constantly building transporters

  • to jump through time and hop dimensions.

  • So the potential is there

  • to bring the teams together this way.

  • I'm not saying that's how they'll do it,

  • but after introducing the concept

  • of time travel in "Endgame" and bringing

  • in the multiverse in "Far From Home,"

  • it's clear Marvel has decided one universe

  • isn't enough to play with.

  • They're going for infinity.

  • The Ancient One: You think you know how the world works?

  • Stephen Strange: This doesn't make any sense.

  • The Ancient One: Not everything does. Not everything has to.

Oh, my God.

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多元宇宙はどのようにマーベル映画を変更する (How The Multiverse Will Change Marvel Movies)

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    曾怡瑄 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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