Videos by ComicBook.com
Civil War has become a pretty well-worn piece of Marvel mythology, with it eventually being adapted for the blockbuster movie Captain America: Civil War. It’s hard to picture the Marvel Universe without the book, but there was a time when Civil War was a huge chance that the publisher was taking. They staked everything on a comic that would break the Marvel Universe, and despite the book having its share of problems, it’s become one of Marvel’s most beloved event comics. Civil War broke Marvel in numerous ways, and it’s still kind of insane that they were able to pull it off.
Civil War Destroyed the Cornerstone of the Marvel Universe

Civil War has something of a tainted legacy for numerous reasons. There’s the characterization problem, especially for Captain America and Iron Man, but it worked across the line. While Marvel’s heroes could often be contentious, this was the publisher that made the shared universe; a big part of what made their comics popular was the way that everyone knew each other and worked together. Civil War broke that, and instead of fixing it all the end, Marvel let its universe stayed broken.
Back in 2005, there was a lot of talk about how the story would end. None of us really believed that the grudge match between Cap’s anti-Registration forces and Iron Man’s pro-Registration forces would lead to the status quo that we got when the story ended. A lot of us expected that a big bad would be revealed that was pulling everyone’s strings and the heroes would have to team up to defeat them (I personally thought it would be Mephisto, so I beat the MCU fans’ obsession with Mephisto by over a decade). We’re so used to the idea of Civil War, it’s easy to forget that this story was taking a huge chance.









