Yes, Wanda Maximoff (Scarlet Witch) does become a villain or "evil" at times, especially in the MCU's Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, driven by grief and corruption from the Darkhold, though her arc often portrays her as a tragic figure battling her immense power and trauma rather than purely evil, making her a complex anti-hero or villain depending on the storyline. Her journey in WandaVision shows her moving from grief-fueled control to acceptance, but Multiverse of Madness delves into her darker potential, leading to villainous actions against other heroes.
Wanda seeks out help in restoring Vision's emotions but becomes corrupted by a parasitic life form called That Which Endures. Under its influence, Wanda turns against the Avengers.
Finally, after realizing that her actions caused her to be rejected by the Tommy and Billy from an alternate universe, Maximoff redeemed herself and sought to set things right.
Eventually, she ended up in a terrible orphanage where she faced bullying. However, she was determined to resist and fight her way through these challenges. At the age of thirteen, she became a villain. Known as "The first female supervillain," Scarlet attends 1968's Villain-Con in search of new henchmen.
Wanda starts out as a science experiment—an enhanced teenager mad at the world and with freaky superpowers—and she ends her story as one of, if not the, most powerful Avenger, with so much power that she in effect starts becoming a villain again, and has to destroy herself.
Wanda Maximoff's enemies shift significantly as she changes allegiances. Because Stark missiles kill her parents and nearly kill her and her twin brother Pietro, Wanda spends much of her youth hating Tony Stark.
Namor is revealed as the most hated Avenger, struggling with a violent legacy and self-loathing. Namor has been both a hero and a villain, causing controversy throughout his long history. In Namor #1, he must face his past and salvage his legacy while navigating prison and public disdain.
Clea, also known as Clea Strange, is a fictional character and superheroine from Marvel comics. She was the niece of Dormammu of the Dark Dimension, and love interest of Doctor Strange, first by becoming his apprentice to his lover and estranged wife. She was the Sorcerer Supreme of Earth and the Dark Dimension.
Realizing the harm and damage she had done to others, she decided to let her simulacrum family go and put herself in exile. When she began to study the Darkhold to refine her powers, however, she became corrupted by its dark magic and fell under the delusion that she would find her children in another universe.
The "Marvel Big Three" generally refers to either Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor (especially in the MCU era) or Spider-Man, Wolverine, and Hulk (often considered the classic comic book trio). The first group represents core Avengers leadership, while the second reflects enduring popularity and presence across different media, embodying power, edge, and relatable humanity.
Kamala discovers that she possesses a dormant X-Gene, making her a mutant/Inhuman hybrid. Charles Xavier plans to have Kamala announce her dual heritage to the general public at the Hellfire Gala to improve mutant and human relations, but is prevented from doing so when Orchis forces attack the Gala.
THE BIRTH OF BILLY AND TOMMY
While Wanda was married to the Vision, she used her reality-altering hex powers and magic to become pregnant with the twins. During that mystical process, Wanda created the twins using parts of souls that belonged to Mephisto.
William "Billy" Maximoff is the son of Wanda Maximoff and Vision and the younger twin brother of Tommy Maximoff.
🍿: The first on-screen F-bomb in the Marvel Cinematic Universe landed in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, when Star-Lord finally snaps and drops the word during an emotionally charged moment.
In one breaking the fourth wall moment, Agatha's partner even says, “Oh she's really most sincerely dead,” in reference to the body. So yeah, Wanda is 100% dead after the events of Multiverse of Madness, and Agatha All Along doubles down on that, in case you missed it. …
NoobMaster69 in Avengers: Endgame is the same character, Aaron, from Captain America: The Winter Soldier, an Apple Store employee who played Fortnite with Thor and Korg, revealed in a later Xbox tie-in commercial where his cousin (who created the name) appears, tying him back to the MCU's gamer tag in Endgame.
J.A.R.V.I.S. was replaced by F.R.I.D.A.Y. in the MCU because J.A.R.V.I.S. evolved into the sentient being Vision at the end of Avengers: Age of Ultron, leaving Tony Stark needing a new primary AI for his suit, with F.R.I.D.A.Y. serving as the next step in his AI development, not just a temporary fix.
Created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko, Clea first appeared in the Doctor Strange feature in Strange Tales #126 (November 1964). She is a sorceress, the disciple, lover, and eventual wife of Doctor Stephen Strange, and his third successor as Sorcerer Supreme. Textless variant cover of Doctor Strange #6 (July 2023).
The most dangerous Marvel villain is arguably Thanos. He possesses immense power, a relentless ambition, and a willingness to sacrifice everything to achieve his goals. His power as a God-like being with incredible strength, durability, and manipulation abilities makes him a formidable opponent.
Lady Mastermind is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by writer Chris Claremont and artist Salvador Larroca, the character first appeared as Regan Wyngarde in X-Treme X-Men #6 (December 2001). Lady Mastermind from X-Men #197.
Many characters that have been in the movies are confirmed to be LGBTQIA+ in the comics (iceman, mystique, Kate pryde, a lot of others) along with having many identifying actors playing characters in the franchise.
The Biggest Marvel Movie Flops
Steve Rogers, Peter Parker and Sue Storm are all characters known for their compassion in Marvel.