They saved the world once — now they hunger to consume it.
The multiverse has shattered. The gods have fallen. And from the ruins of once-great legacies rises a universe where the line between savior and monster has been devoured — literally. Marvel Zombies (2025) isn’t just Marvel’s darkest tale to date; it’s a post-apocalyptic blood opera soaked in dread, tragedy, and decayed capes.
Set in Earth-2149, years after a mysterious virus turned Earth's mightiest heroes into flesh-eating abominations, Marvel Zombies opens on a world choked in ash and silence. Civilization is dust. Humanity, prey. And the Avengers? They’re hungry.
Peter Parker, still aware but rotting, swings through corpse-littered streets, haunted by memory. A ghoulish Wanda Maximoff whispers to the skeleton of Vision in their ruined home. Captain America’s shield now cleaves flesh. And somewhere in a collapsed Wakanda, T’Challa is kept alive — piece by piece — by a once-noble scientist now ruled by hunger: Reed Richards.
But there’s one spark left in this dead universe. A group of young survivors — including a bitter Kate Bishop, a feral X-23, and a damaged yet uninfected Deadpool — have stumbled upon a signal from another world. A cure may exist. But to get there, they must travel through hell: fighting their way through zombified Guardians, mutant hordes, and a brain-craving Galactus who feasts not on worlds, but minds.
Directed by Sam Raimi and drenched in grotesque style, Marvel Zombies is Marvel unchained — a brutal meditation on identity, memory, and what’s left of a hero when the heart stops beating… but the body still moves.