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G.O.D.S was Hickman’s first work after helping to create the X-Men’s Krakoa Era, teaming him with Valerio Schiti, who Hickman had worked with both on the X-Men books and the Avengers. G.O.D.S. was sold as a book that would change the cosmic side of the Marvel Universe forever, introducing a new pantheon of all-powerful beings to readers. Many thought it would be something like The Sandman in the Marvel Universe, but what readers got was entirely different, a book so mysterious that we still don’t really know what was going on with it.
G.O.D.S. Is Hickman At His Most Inscrutable

Hickman wrote some of the best Avengers stories and Fantastic Four stories ever, and was all about melding sci-fi to his superhero comics. Hickman and sci-fi went together since his early works at Image, so when Marvel announced a new series from Hickman that was going to deal with the cosmic side of the Marvel Universe, fans were ecstatic. Marvel has some of the greatest cosmic beings in comics, and unleashing Hickman on that side of thing was exciting prospect for many fans. Hickman was always about bringing big ideas to his work, and G.O.D.S felt like it was going to be very special.
G.O.D.S starred Wyn, who was an avatar of The-Powers-That-Be, abstract beings that represented magic, dealing with a crisis between The-Powers-That-Be and The-Natural-Order-of-Things, who represented science, when a being called Cubisk Core stole the Staff of the Living Tribunal. The book introduced a new pantheon of characters that represented the two “gods”, and their struggle to save all of reality, with Doctor Strange showing up as the touchstone character. Hickman built up the characters over the eight-issue series, illustrating the war between science and magic, using that to deal with philosophical themes about the nature of humanity and our existence.









