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Who will be the next Thanos has been a point of conversation since before the Mad Titan had even been killed, and very clearly one that took place not only among MCU fans, but internally at Marvel Studios as well. It was supposed to be Kang the Conqueror, as he was setup as the big bad of the Multiverse Saga, featuring in several movies and TV shows en route to facing the Avengers. But after Jonathan Majors was dropped due to assault charges, Marvel has pivoted to Doctor Doom, who will (at least) be in Avengers: Doomsday and Avengers: Secret Wars.
In between them, though, was Galactus, another villain where there were hopes of something bigger (and not just because the Devourer of Worlds was smaller than expected in The Fantastic Four: First Steps). In terms of powers, he’s another level-up, so he certainly could be an Avengers-level threat across multiple movies. And there were some hopes that might happen, and disappointment at his one-movie defeat (for now) by the Fantastic Four. But that shouldn’t be seen as a bad thing: it’s what the MCU needs more of.
Marvel Just Needs Good Villains (Whether They Return Or Not)

Galactus was the perfect choice for Marvel’s Fantastic Four reboot. He is, along with Doctor Doom, one of the team’s two premier villains, and one who poses a fascinating threat because he’s a higher cosmic being, something that simply “is” rather than someone who is evil. He requires scientific smarts to defeat as much as brute power. But he’s also a giant threat, and there are no guarantees in the MCU, especially not anymore. The movie had one shot – it needed to convince people Marvel’s First Family could work on the big screen after multiple failures – so it was right to use that on Galactus.
This is the approach Marvel needs more of, even with the Avengers. The focus should be on great villains for the story at hand. If it can lead to something bigger, wonderful, but if not, you’ve at least told a strong tale. This isn’t really any different to how things started with Earth’s Mightiest Heroes. Loki in The Avengers had been in one movie prior, wasn’t setup as some major foe, and he’s still one of the best antagonists they’ve faced. Ultron had issues, but none of them were related to a lack of setup or follow-up appearances, but more simply the writing and production issues with Age of Ultron.









