Перевод скоро — показан английский оригинал.

Entertainment

Marvel hints at return to dark Ruins continuity in Thor's storyline

Sofia Martinez — Culture & Entertainment Editor
By Sofia Martinez · Culture & Entertainment Editor
· 5 min read

_

By

Ambrose Tardive

Published May 11, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT

Ambrose Tardive is an editor on ScreenRant's Comics team. Over the past two years, he has developed into the internet's foremost authority on The Far Side. Outside of his work for ScreenRant, Ambrose works as an Adjunct English Instructor.

Sign in to your ScreenRant account

Warning! Spoilers ahead for The Mortal Thor_!

Is Marvel returning to its darkest timeline ever? Thor's current story arc is set to take him to "the worst of all possible worlds" later this year, but is this phrasing just a Voltaire reference, or could it be something more? It's possible Marvel is about to revisit the bleakest corner of the Multiverse, 31 years after it was introduced.

_

That is, the Ruins_ timeline. In 1995, Marvel released the two-shot _Ruins _series, written by Warren Ellis. It's not so much a story as a collection of the most gruesome possible fates for Marvel's top characters. Ruins went places the Marvel Universe never had before, and never would again. But now it seems like Thor could be headed back there.

_Ruins _was controversial at the time of its release, and it's even more divisive in retrospect, three decades later. Still, if Marvel wants to live up to the promise of sending Thor to "the worst of all possible worlds," then it should return to the world of Ruins. Or, do the unthinkable, and conjure up an even more depraved Marvel timeline than Ellis did in '95.

It might seem like more of a longshot for _Ruins _to make a comeback, except there's one thing that makes it more likely. _The Mortal Thor _author Al Ewing is at his best when he's digging deep into Marvel history and making forgotten lore central to the modern Marvel Universe. If anyone could use _Ruins _right, it's Ewing.

Marvel Teases A Visit To The "Worst Of All Possible" Timelines, But Is It A Return Visit?

The Mortal Thor #14, Written By Al Ewing; Art y Pasqual Ferry; Cover By Alex Ross

_ Mortal Thor #14 cover, Sigurd Jarlson confronting the Serpent amidst the cosmos

Here's the full synopsis for The Mighty Thor _#14:

** The Serpent has trapped Sigurd Jarlson in the worst of all possible worlds for his greatest trial. Now, without even a weapon in his hand, he must prove himself worthy to enter the Realms of the Gods. Somewhere in the city, a man without even a hammer begins the ultimate quest... the quest for Thor!

Now, "the worst of all possible worlds" is a phrase with a history. It is an inversion of the phrase "the best of all possible worlds," which is most closely associated with Voltaire's 18th-century novel Candide. In the book, the character Pangloss is convinced the world is the best it could possibly be, despite the increasingly horrible calamities that befall him. And in fact, Pangloss was a parody of the earlier philosopher Gottfried Liebnitz, who espoused the "best of all possible worlds" idea.

Warren Ellis' _Ruins _was a similar kind of inversion. It was, to put it bluntly, a mean-spirited response to 1994's _Marvels _miniseries, written by Kurk Busiek and featuring art by Alex Ross. _Ruins _was done in the same style as Marvels, and even featured the same human POV character, Phil Sheldon, a newspaper photographer. Yet while _Marvels _portrayed the Marvel Universe as a place of wonder, _Ruins _turned it into the setting of utmost tragedy.

In the context of the Marvel Multiverse, Ruins certainly fits the "worst of all possible worlds" bill, with only a few rivals for the title. And there are a few hints that suggest the use of the phrase might be more than just a literary reference or stock language.

If Thor Really Is Going To Visit The Multiverse's Worst Timeline, It Should Be "Ruins"

_Ruins _#1-2, Published In 1995

_

The cover for The Mortal Thor _#14 is by _Marvels _artist Alex Ross. To be fair, Ross has been doing the covers for Al Ewin's _Thor _saga going back to the previous serious, Immortal Thor. But it would be exactly like Ewing to nod to Ross by revisiting a timeline his work inspired. And it would also be so Ewing to "redeem" Marvel's darkest timeline.

That isn't to say save it, or even give it a glimmer of hope. But rather, to use it in a way that matters. _Ruins _was suffering for its own sake. Grittiness toward the end of being gritty. The Mortal Thor could give it a purpose, so many years later. And it would make sense from a story perspective. Thor is currently trapped in the mortal form of his second human alter-ego, Sigurd Jarlson, fighting against a soulless version of Donald Blake, his original human identity.

_

Related

Marvel Is Removing Thor from Its Continuity, And I Know What's Next For the God of Thunder

Yes, it's true - Marvel is removing Thor and the Asgardian gods from its official continuity. Here's what's next for the God of Thunder.

Posts

34

By Robert Wood

Thor is noticeably absent from Ruins_, but the series did feature another version of Blake, who was a deranged cult leader in this timeline. That Donald Black could prove to be a fitting addition to The Mortal Thor, as an enemy of Sigurd Jarlson, which would be an apropos reason to bring back _Marvel's _**darkest timeline ever.

__ Subscribe for deeper Marvel multiverse analysis

_ Join the newsletter to unlock deeper context, historical tie-ins, and clear explanations of Marvel multiverse turns like Ruins — ideal for readers who want thoughtful analysis and connective threads across comics.

**_Get Updates

_ By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

The Mortal Thor_ #14 **will be available in August from Marvel Comics.

**What do you think, Marvel readers? Is _Ruins _returning, or is the speculation all smoke and mirrors?