When Do Gods In Marvel First Appear In Comics?

2025-08-26 08:47:28
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4 Answers

Kyle
Kyle
Favorite read: Deity Genesis
Careful Explainer UX Designer
My weekend ritual is hunting down older trades, and the evolution of gods in Marvel reads like a living thing. The watershed moment is Thor's 1962 arrival in 'Journey into Mystery' #83; after that, mythological figures become part of continuity rather than one-off curios. The 1960s and 1970s are where Marvel assembled its pantheons: Norse gods first, then Olympians and other cultural deities, each getting their own comic hooks and crossovers.

Over time Marvel writers tweaked explanations — some deities were framed as immensely powerful extradimensional beings, some as Eternals or creations of cosmic entities. Jack Kirby's 'The Eternals' especially reframed divinity with a sci-fi twist, and later runs kept complicating the picture (retcons, reinterpretations, guest spots in team books). I love that ambiguity: you can read those stories as mythology, superhero drama, or space opera, and all of them work depending on what mood I'm in. If you want a reading path, try classic Thor arcs, then Kirby's cosmic work to see the big-picture shift.
2025-08-27 20:51:16
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Zachary
Zachary
Favorite read: The Forgotten God
Book Guide Engineer
Comic history nerd mode: I love tracing the comic-book genealogy of gods, and the clearest landmark is the Silver Age debut of Marvel's Norse pantheon. The first major, enduring Marvel god to show up was Thor in 'Journey into Mystery' #83 (1962) — Stan Lee and Jack Kirby replanted the Norse myths into a super-hero universe and things exploded from there.

That said, Marvel's roots in myth go a little deeper. During the Golden Age (the Timely era) writers sometimes used mythic themes and one-shot retellings of legends, but it wasn't until the 1960s that mythological beings became regular, shared-universe characters. Throughout the mid-to-late 1960s and into the 1970s Marvel folded in Olympians, Egyptian deities, and cosmic reinterpretations — and later creators even retconned some gods as alien or extra-dimensional beings, which gives the Marvel take its trademark sci-fi spin. If you want to read the origin of Marvel's gods, start with 'Journey into Mystery' and then look forward to the Kirby era of 'The Eternals' for cosmic context.
2025-08-28 12:27:25
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Ryder
Ryder
Favorite read: Throne of Gods
Sharp Observer Worker
I still get a thrill flipping through those old issues: the first time Marvel really put gods on the map was with Thor in 'Journey into Mystery' #83 (1962). Before that, the Golden Age comics occasionally borrowed mythic characters or ideas, but they were more like isolated tales than part of a connected cosmos. Once Thor arrived, Marvel kept bringing in other pantheons — Greek figures like Hercules showed up in the mid-1960s, and over the next decade writers pulled in Egyptian and other mythic traditions.

What I enjoy is how Marvel never treats gods as static: sometimes they're literal gods, sometimes they're aliens, sometimes their origins are rewritten to fit a bigger cosmic story. If you're curious, dip into classic Thor stories and then look at Jack Kirby's 'The Eternals' to see how Marvel mixed mythology with cosmic sci-fi — it’s a surprisingly fun mash-up that still influences modern comics and games.
2025-08-28 20:04:13
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Piper
Piper
Favorite read: Demigod
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Quick and geeky: the first big gods in Marvel comics show up with Thor in 'Journey into Mystery' #83 (1962). Before that, the Golden Age had occasional myth-inspired tales, but nothing as integrated. After Thor, Marvel steadily added Olympians and other pantheons through the 1960s and 1970s, and later writers kept reinterpreting those figures as aliens or cosmic beings. If you're starting, pick a Thor trade and a volume of 'The Eternals' to see how Marvel blends myth with science-fiction — it's a wild, fun combo that stuck with me.
2025-08-29 09:57:11
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