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4->''"This is a paradigm shift. The universe sends a Justice, to maintain order. A Cipher, for the technological leap. A Nightmask, for the consciousness shift. And a Starbrand, for defence."''
5-->-- '''Starbrand''', ''newuniversal'' #4
6
7''Newuniversal'' (usually styled as ''newuniversal'') is a 2006 science fiction comic series published by Creator/MarvelComics and primarily written by Creator/WarrenEllis, a single-series reboot of Marvel's previous [[ComicBook/TheNewUniverse New Universe]] concept. The series was CutShort, abruptly ending shortly into its second arc.
8
9On March 2 2006, the White Event occurs. For a moment, the night sky over the Western Hemisphere turns white. And in its wake a handful of people are transformed into something more than human.
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11It quickly becomes clear that this isn't a purely random occurrence - it's been orchestrated by something alien. And, unknown to the public, the American government is very aware that this isn't the first time this has happened.
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13The first arc, illustrated by Creator/SalvadorLarroca with color art by Jason Keith, focuses on four of the people who've been transformed by the event, each one a reinvention of a key character from the New Universe line.
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15Unlike the original New Universe, the ''newuniversal'' story is immediately connected to the main Franchise/MarvelUniverse, positioned as an alternate world with versions of existing Marvel characters as some of the supporting cast. It also introduces new versions of characters from "''The Sword and the Sorcerers!''", a stand-alone 1970 story in Marvel's ''Chamber of Darkness'' AnthologyComic, linking them to the New Universe concepts and the wider Marvel Universe.
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17The initial arc (later subtitled ''Everything Went White'' for the collected edition) is followed by two one-off historical specials by different creative teams:
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19* ''newuniversal: 1959'' is written by Creator/KieronGillen and illustrated by Gregg Scott and Kody Chamberlain, with color art by Val Staples. It tells the story of the US government's reaction to the three known superhumans created by the previous celestial event, the "Fireworks" of 1953.
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21* ''newuniversal: conqueror'' is written by Creator/SiSpurrier, with art by Eric Nguyen and color art by John Rauch. Almost five thousand years ago there was another White Event. The superhumans that it created built a city in what's now Latvia - and then things went wrong.
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23After the two one-offs, the main series resumed, renumbered and renamed ''newuniversal: shockfront'', with Ellis returning as writer and Steve Kurth and Andrew Hennessy as the artists, with color art by Chris Chuckry.
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25The ''shockfront'' series started to expand the scope to a wider cast of superhumans, but abruptly went on hiatus after the second issue, when Warren Ellis lost all scripts and notes due to a computer crash. The series never resumed and was, eventually, formally cancelled by Marvel.
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27Some elements of ''newuniversal'''s premise were later incorporated into the main Marvel Universe (alongside other concepts taken directly from the original New Universe books), most notably as part of Creator/JonathanHickman's run on [[ComicBook/TheAvengersJonathanHickman The Avengers]] and Creator/AlEwing's run on [[ComicBook/TheUltimates2015 The Ultimates]].
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29The first issue of ''newuniversal'' was released December 6, 2006. The last issue (#2) of ''newuniversal: shockfront'' was released June 11, 2008.
30
31----
32!!newuniversal contains examples of:
33* AbortedArc: Many of them, due to the CutShort nature of the series.
34** Jenny knows she's superhuman, and she's fixed the H.E.X. suit, but when we last see her she's not yet contacted the other superhumans or defected from Project Spitfire.
35** The ruins of Zardath have been uncovered, but we don't know what's setting off Braddock's geiger counter. Or why the ruins were suddenly uncovered when the White Event took place. The end of the ''conqueror'' one-off also leaves the city's final fate unrevealed, although it wasn't looking good.
36** The implication that this ''isn't'' a StableTimeLoop is never followed up on.
37** John Tensen is still a superhuman spree killer and vigilante who thinks he's dead and in hell, and hasn't yet encountered any other superhumans.
38** Ken and Izzy are heading to meet Magniconte, but Magniconte's just been blown up by Project Spitfire.
39** Ken and Izzy are also starting to track the explosive teleporter who caused havoc in San Francisco, but haven't found him yet.
40** Charlotte Beck is mapping out the alternate history of the world, but not yet in touch with other superhumans.
41** Dr. Emmett Proudhawk is now superhuman, can interact with the superflow, and has used his CIA connections to start tracking other superhumans, but hasn't heard anything back yet.
42* AdaptationalBackstoryChange: In ''Chamber of Darkness'' Len Carson was a pulp author writing about a (supposedly) fictional barbarian hero, Starr the Slayer. In ''newuniversal'' he's field director of the archaeological dig unearthing the ruins of Zardath, Starr's city.
43* AdaptationalWimp: In the original [[ComicBook/TheNewUniverse New Universe]], Philip Nolan Voigt was one of the most powerful paranormals in the world, the BigBad of ''ComicBook/DP7''. In ''newuniversal'' he appears to be a normal human.
44* AdaptedOut: The condensed and CutShort nature of the series means that many, many New Universe characters never appear (although almost all of the original titles are represented in some way). Among the most significant examples:
45** Marc Hazzard, star of the eponymous ''ComicBook/MarkHazzardMerc'' plays no part in the series.
46** Dr. Emmett Proudhawk, mentor to ''ComicBook/PsiForce'', appears - but none of the Psi-Force team do.
47** Charlotte Beck comes from ''ComicBook/DP7'' (as does antagonist Philip Voight), but none of the other team members appear.
48* AdaptationalVillainy:
49** In the New Universe, Dr. Karl Swensen was a benevolent engineer who was insistent that his M.A.X. armor was only for peaceful purposes. In ''newuniversal'' his equivalent, Dr. Joe Swann, is a [=CIA=] agent who helped to kill the superhumans of the 1950s, and the powered armor he was working on is to help kill their successors.
50** The New Universe's Troubleshooters were engineering students and pranksters who helped Jenny confront her father's killers. The ''newuniversal'' Troubleshooters are Voight's [=CIA=] teams, who monitor and murder superhumans.
51* AdaptationNameChange:
52** Jenny Swensen of the New Universe's ''ComicBook/CodenameSpitfire'' becomes ''newuniversal'''s Jenny Swann, as Warren Ellis felt that the original comics had too many similar surnames: Swensen, Tensen (Justice) and Remsen (the original Nightmask, replaced by Izanami Randall for ''newuniversal'').
53** Jenny's father, Dr. Karl Swensen, becomes Dr. Joe Swann - and his M.A.X. armor becomes the H.E.X. suit.
54* AlternateUniverse: The series is explicitly set on Earth-555, one of the many alternate worlds linked to the Marvel Universe. That Earth ID number is quoted in-universe at one point, and several supporting characters are variants of existing characters. Additionally, two of the extra Starbrands at the end of the first arc are said to be visiting from alternate worlds.
55* AssholeVictim:
56** Tensen's powers as Justice means that while he's a murderous madman, he's one that only targets evildoers. His first victim is a serial killing nurse who weakly justifies his actions as mercy killings.
57** Subverted with Kenneth's first usage of his powers against a group of cops beating him up. While it's self-defense, the cops only attack him first because they think he murdered an innocent woman and then because he's making things melt and explode with his mind and they're predictably terrified. Kenneth is traumatized and feels awful about it afterwards.
58* BarrierWarrior: Part of the Justice power set. Tensen can create force shields to block attacks, or in mid air to use as stepping stones. He can also project them for a ShieldBash that's far less lethal than his usual LaserBlade.
59* BenevolentBoss: Voight is a cold-blooded WellIntentionedExtremist who WouldHurtAChild (and did), but he won't ask his team to do anything he wouldn't do himself. He insists on personally assassinating Magniconte to demonstrate this point - which means he walks into a room with a superhuman who’s just [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe torn someone in half]], and hopes his cover holds up. And he does all of this knowing that one of Magniconte's predecessors could read minds. The man is a monster, but not a coward.
60* BewareTheSuperman: Played with. The events of the 1950s have left the NSA's Project Spitfire with some of these assumptions about superhumans, which may or may not be true. Either way, they are determined to kill superhumans to ''stop'' it becoming true. Voight in particular is a zealous field agent-turned-director who believes that superhumans are [[TranshumanAbomination transhuman abominations]] that don't even think like normal people and will inevitably start trying to take over the world out of some darwinistic drive.
61* BoomHeadshot: In ''1959'', NSA agents Voight and Swann debrief a cheerful [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark]] after his escape from North Vietnam. And then Voight shoots him in the head.
62* CanonWelding: Starr the Slayer, Trull and Len Carson were characters from a one-off fantasy story in ''Chamber of Darkness'' with no clear connection to the shared Marvel Universe, unlike the ''newuniversal'' versions.
63* CassandraTruth: Jenny very quickly and logically pieces together that the White Event is likely a paranormal event that randomly selects people to bless with powers, as well as that Kenneth Connell was acting in self-defense when he violently broke out of prison, and tells her boss such. Unfortunately, Voight is too blinded by his TheoryTunnelVision to accept it.
64* ComicBookTime: Very much averted. The series is specifically set in 2006 and puts timestamp captions on most major events.
65* CrusadingWidow: In the ''1959'' one-off, Veronica Kelly is the widow of a police officer who was secretly murdered by a crooked colleague. Once she gets the Justice powers she can see the crime in the culprit's mind. And she can cut him to pieces with energy blades.
66* CutShort: The series was cancelled midway through the second ''Shockwave'' arc after Warren Ellis lost all notes and scripts due to a computer crash (several of the other projects he was working on were cancelled in the same way).
67* DeathByAdaptation:
68** [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark]] is the 1950s Cipher, empowered by the Fireworks. He built a prototype Iron Man suit to escape from North Vietnam. And then the NSA [[BoomHeadshot killed him]] out of fear that he'd meet the other two 1950s superhumans.
69** In the original New Universe, Madeline Felix (more often known by her nickname, "Debbie the Duck") is a regular supporting character for the first year or more, eventually dying in childbirth after the events of ''ComicBook/ThePitt''. In ''newuniversal'' she's immediately killed when Connell receives the Starbrand power.
70* DeathByOriginStory: Ken Connell's girlfriend Madeline Felix, who's CollateralDamage when the Starbrand is transmitted to Connell while they're both asleep. The overflow incinerates her.
71* DiagonalCut: Tensen applies two, in an x-shape, to one of the men who shot him. He doesn’t fall apart until after the second swing.
72* EvilChancellor: Trull, the Nightmask of ancient Zardath, holds this role in the ''conqueror'' one-off. He's been mutating and murdering other superhumans, but until the start of the story Starr is oblivious to this.
73* FlatEarthAtheist: Deconstructed. Voight's unwillingness to accept that there's anything supernatural about the White Events and the powers they bring is a major factor in him becoming a monstrous KnightTemplar, leading to him utterly misunderstanding the situation simply because [[IRejectYourReality he refuses to acknowledge anything that contradicts his hard materialist view]]. He blows up into an utter rage when Jenny dares to mention the possibility of something divine happening.
74* FleshAndBombs: In ''1959'' the government uses Veronica Kelly's body, treated so that she still looks alive at first glance, to lure Lester Robbins into the blast radius of their bombs. Whether or not the body is wired up with explosives, or just the house, is left unclear.
75* HalfTheManHeUsedToBe:
76** A silhouette suggests this is the fate of the last surviving member of the gang who shot Tensen prior to the White Event. Tensen uses his Justice powers to cut them all to pieces with [[LaserBlade Laser Blades]].
77** Veronica Kelly, the previous (1950s) Justice, seems to have done this to some of her targets during her career as a vigilante. And the ''1959'' special also shows her cutting two NSA agents in half after they poison her.
78** Jack Magniconte, who doesn't realise that he now has SuperStrength, accidentally tears an opponent in half during a charity football game.
79* HealingFactor: Kenneth discovers that his Starbrand powers come with healing powers when he tries to smash his branded hand off with a rock, only for it to immediately fix itself.
80* HerosEvilPredecessor: As seen in ''Conquerer'', Trull, the Nightmask of ancient Zardath, conspired against Starr, destroyed most of Ukru the Justice's mind and experimented on other superhumans until they degenerated into monsters.
81* HiredToHuntYourself: Jennifer Swann is trying to build powered armor for the NSA's Project Spitfire, so that they can hunt and kill superhumans. After years of stalled progress, Swann easily manages to fix the armor's technical problems shortly after the White Event, realising that this is because she's just become a superhuman herself.
82* IncrediblyObviousBomb: When the 1950s Nightmask, Lester Robbins, returns to Veronica Kelly's house in the ''1959'' one-off, the bomb the government's planted there is very visible. But by the time he sees it, it's too late.
83* InterchangeableAsianCultures: Called out and complained about by Izanami, who understandably despises being called Chinese when she's Japanese.
84* LaserBlade: Part of the Justice power set. Tensen manifests them as pure white blades with a bluish edge, either used as a sword or cast as a missile. Kelly, the 1950s Justice, manifested them as knives and scissors sculpted from light blue energy.
85* MakeItLookLikeAnAccident: Voight's preferred tactic, although in practice he relies on bombs more than once.
86-->'''Phillip Voight:''' We had a saying, in the original Project Spitfire: "''Bombs cause wars. Accidents cause funerals.''"
87* MassSuperEmpoweringEvent: The White Event, the moment a planet locks into their place in the Superflow, marking a major paradigm shift for the inhabitants of that world. Not all such Events are perfect, however, and Earth has gone through three failed White Events prior to the semi-success in 2006 that kicks off the plot.
88* MercyKill: Tensen's first victim is a nurse who occasionally murders his own patients as an "angel of death" serial killer, justifying his acts as ones of mercy preventing unnecessary suffering. Said nurse was intending to do this to the comatose Tensen before the White Event heals and empowers him.
89* MetaOrigin: This was always intended to be part of the New Universe concept, but some titles didn't follow this rule, or were only connected by a {{Retcon}}. ''Newuniversal'' sticks to this rule from the start, with all superhumans empowered by the White Event or its predecessors.
90** In the original New Universe, Jenny initially had no superpowers and her father's powered armor was unrelated to the White Event. In ''newuniversal'' Jenny's empowered as the new Cipher and the H.E.X. armor is based on a 1950s suit designed by the ''previous'' Cipher, [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark]].
91** Starr and Trull were originally a barbarian and wizard from a fantasy story. In ''newuniversal'' Starr's might comes from the Starbrand and Trull's dark wizardry is because he's a Nightmask.
92* MookHorrorShow: John Tensen, empowered as Justice, tracks the men who shot him to a darkened warehouse. There's a speech from the shadows, telling them he's there. And then he cuts them to pieces.
93* NotHisSled: Tony Stark goes through his classic origin story of being kidnapped by terrorists and inventing the Iron Man armor to escape… then gets murdered by Voight to keep the existence of superhumans secret before he can become a superhero.
94* OfCorpseHesAlive: Played for drama in ''1959''. Veronica Kelly's corpse is sitting in her house when Robbins returns, looking lifelike from a distance. It's been set up by the government to lure him into a FleshAndBombs trap.
95* ThePoorlyChosenOne:
96** Trull, the Nightmask of ancient Zardath, as seen in ''conqueror''. He's an EvilChancellor who's more interested in stealing power from his fellow superhumans than fulfilling his role. It gets to the point where the system that empowered him is actively trying to warn Starr about what he's doing.
97** Arguably, John Tensen. Under normal circumstances he might be an effective Justice, but when he was chosen he was in a coma with a bullet in his brain. When he wakes up with his new powers he's not entirely rational, not least because he's convinced that he's died and gone to hell.
98* PowerIncontinence: Magniconte doesn't initially realize he's gained superpowers and learns he has when he accidentally kills an opposing player with his unbridled super-strength right in the middle of a football game.
99* RichardNixonTheUsedCarSalesman: A number of characters from the mainstream Marvel Universe show up in radically different roles. Mary Jane Watson is a movie producer and drug addict, John Jameson serves in the military, Jim Braddock is an archeologist, and Tony Stark is an underachiever who ''almost'' becomes Iron Man but is murdered before he can. Amusingly subverted with General Ross, though, who's still a general in the army.
100* RippleEffectProofMemory: This seems to be part of Charlotte Beck's powers. When she first appears in ''shockfront'' she's spent two weeks mapping out the history of the ''newuniversal'' Earth and how it differs from the "real" one she remembers.
101* ShoutOut: Archaeologist Len Carson mentions ''Literature/TheDayOfTheTriffids'' when he talks about sleeping through the White Event.
102* TheSocialDarwinist: Voight possesses a hyper-darwinistic view of the world that leads to him believing superhumans are an emergent new species evolving into existence that will try to kill and subjugate normal humans out of survival of the fittest. He also views his fellow humans who don't share this view as "weak".
103* SparedByTheAdaptation: He only appears briefly, and it may have been averted later if the series wasn't CutShort, but Emmett Proudhawk avoids his MentorOccupationalHazard from the original ''ComicBook/PsiForce'' series.
104* StableTimeLoop: Played with. When the four Starbrands meet in the Wichita mountains, two of the visitors are from alternate universes and the third is an older version of Ken, from fifty years in the future. All three of them ''believe'' it's a stable loop. But then Nightmask teleports the younger Ken away, and his older self certainly doesn't remember ''that'', clearly indicating that the old Ken is just another alternate (fitting with the rules of time travel in Marvel; namely that it doesn't exist and that you just jaunt to or create a CloseEnoughTimeline).
105* TamperingWithFoodAndDrink: In the ''1959'' one-off, after considering Veronica Kelly's abilities, the NSA decides that the best way to kill her is by poisoning a meal when she eats at a local restaurant. It works, but not before she realizes she's been poisoned and kills several NSA agents.
106* TheoryTunnelVision: Voight's certainty in his (extremely incorrect) interpretation of how the White Events and those they empower function that he will not tolerate any alternate suggestions. He blackmails the initial director of Project Spitfire into resigning simply because said director questions his brutal treatment of supers and later screams his head off over Jenny idly speculating that he may not understand as much as he thinks he does.
107* UncertainDoom:
108** ''conqueror'' ends with Starr and Baneth discovering Trull's treachery and murder, with the framing text suggesting that he must flee or face Starr's wrath. It doesn't reveal what happened next… though, given Trull was standing directly next to Starr when this reveal happened, things don't look good for the former.
109** The last published issue of ''shockfront'' ends with Magniconte in a room with a briefcase bomb - which detonates and does major damage to the building. Unless he was teleported out, or has a ''significant'' level of invulnerability (both of which are entirely possible, in this context) he's likely to be dead. But it's never confirmed.
110* WhamLine: For most of the first issue, you're led to believe that Earth-555 is LikeRealityUnlessNoted, just like your typical superhero universe. Than we overhear a news report about how it's Music/JohnLennon's birthday… and the reporter casually mentions that [[AlternateHistory the still-alive Lennon therefore has given a speech asking that people remember his dearly departed friend, Paul McCartney, who was murdered decades prior]].
111* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: As with the AbortedArc list, the CutShort nature of the aeries left a couple of these behind.
112** Although the two one-offs do show the ancient city of Zardath and the 1950s, Voight also mentions that the NSA was aware of one superhuman created in 1888, who apparently died in UsefulNotes/WorldWarOne. We don't get any further details about them.
113** Jim Braddock is the dig leader in Latvia, uncovering the ruins of Zardath. It’s mentioned that he lost his son at a dig in England the previous year, but this isn't followed up on. In the main Marvel universe, James Braddock Sr. is also the father of Brian Braddock, the original ComicBook/CaptainBritain.
114* WouldHurtAChild: Back in 1959, NSA agent Phillip Voight shot Robbins' and Kelly's baby, acting in the belief that superhuman powers can be inherited.
115* WrongGenreSavvy: Voight's evil actions are motivated near entirely by his laughably wrong assumptions of how the White Events and superpowers work, like thinking that superhumans don't think like humans and will instinctively try to dominate humans (when they're actually meant to protect and help them) and angrily dismissing any suggestion that the process may be something other than mundane evolution (it's a divine cosmic process that all planets go through).

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