How ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ Sets the Stage for Marvel Phase 5

Culture

Paul Rudd as Scott LangAntMan and Jonathan Majors as Kang the Conqueror in AntMan and the Wasp Quantumania.

Paul Rudd as Scott Lang/Ant-Man and Jonathan Majors as Kang the Conqueror in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.Courtesy of Jay Maidment for Marvel Studios.
The MCU multiverse is in for a wild ride. Here’s how the events of this film tee up the next movies and series to follow.

Major spoilers for Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania follow

Much of the criticisms levied at Phase 4 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe involved the films not having a clear arc building to a foreseeable climax (i.e. the search for the Infinity Stones across Phases 2 and 3). That’s no longer the case. With the release of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania—and the start of Phase 5—Marvel has declared who will fill the Thanos-sized void in the MCU: Jonathan Majors’ Kang.  but Ant-Man offers a few other breadcrumbs on the larger story direction of this phase and the next, beyond just the Kang of it all. Let’s break all these teases down on a subatomic level and theorize what they mean for the future of the MCU.

A Low-Key Refresher on Loki

First, a quick refresher on the last time we saw a version of Kang, which was in the season finale of  Loki. This version of Kang, called “He Who Remains,” makes specific mention of the fact he faced different versions of himself (aka variants) who were all “fighting to preserve their universe and annihilate the others.” This constant conflict between Kang variants ultimately resulted in a Multiversal War, which threatened to destroy the entire world(s). That is, until He Who Remains defeated all of the other Kang variants.

After becoming the only Kang to, well, remain, He established the Time Variance Authority (TVA) and the Sacred Timeline to keep everything from descending into chaos again. The TVA’s main objective is to destroy any person, place, or thing that deviated from the Sacred Timeline so that things wouldn’t dissolve into another massive war.

However, at the end of Loki, a variant of the God of Mischief named Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino), whose life was ruined by the TVA’s tyrannical control over the timeline, killed He Who Remains out of revenge.  With He Who Remains gone, there’s nothing left to keep the Sacred Timeline going, which meant the return of other Kang variants—a fate hinted at by He Who Remains in his final moments.

Incursion Events Start Coming, and They Don’t Stop Coming

As we saw in last year’s Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, an incursion occurs when the boundary between two different universes breaks down and collides, destroying one or both realities in the process. Since He Who Remains is no longer present to keep the timeline in order, incursions increased. 

We learn in Quantumania that Kang the Conqueror played his fair share of judge, jury, and executioner while protecting his reality from impending incursions. This eventually drew the attention of the Council of Kangs, who exiled the Conqueror to the Quantum Realm—something discussed in the post-credits sequence of the movie. If we’re to believe the Conqueror, he was ostensibly punished for trying to create a cleaner reality, putting him down a similar path to He Who Remains. The Council doesn’t seem particularly keen on protecting anything, happy to function as chaos agents throughout the multiverse.

With the Conqueror off the table now, the Council turns their attention to the threat that took him out: an Avenger starting to “touch” the multiverse. Scott Lang/Ant-Man (Paul Rudd) isn’t the only one with knowledge of the multiverse, as both Peter Parker (Tom Holland) and Doctor Strange’s (Benedict Cumberbatch) recent adventures familiarize them with the realization of alternate dimensions. 

What Does This Mean for the MCU?

Aware of an avenging threat, it’s only a matter of time before the Kangs spring into action in 2025’s Avengers: The Kang Dynasty. But how would incursions play into that? With the Sacred Timeline shattered, there’s a possibility of an incursion happening at any moment in a Marvel project.

The most likely place for an incursion may come from an unconventional source: Deadpool 3.. The Ryan Reynolds-led franchise currently exists in its own Fox reality, but part of the appeal of Disney now owning the rights is to fold the Merc with the Mouth into the proper MCU. The end of Deadpool 2 saw the character time-traveling around to fix events in his past. This meddling could cause an incursion in the third film, allowing Marvel to engineer a scheme to bring him into the MCU through multiversal shenanigans.

One thing is for sure: as we get closer to the release of Avengers: Secret Wars in 2026, anticipate more multiverse incidents. Based on the event comic written by Jonathan Hickman and drawn by artist Esad Ribić, Secret Wars saw various Marvel Comics realities come into a new, patchwork world—complete with alternate versions of Marvel characters after an incursion. The appeal would be to trump No Way Home, so think about Sir Ian McKellen’s Magento returning possibly sharing the screen with, say, Ms. Marvel star Iman Vellani. 

With a second mention of incursions and a lingering army of multiversal Kangs, Quantumania is making Marvel’s multiversal intentions clear. Get ready for a whole new world(s) of possibility.

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I’d certainly give it a try