10 Comics You Must Read Before Avengers: Infinity War

8. Secret Wars

Secret Wars 1984 Marvel Comics
Marvel Comics

Although there's little to tie Secret Wars to Infinity War, for it lacks a Thanos, a gem, or a dead hero, its scope and influence on the event genre must be acknowledged.

Written by Jim Shooter and drawn by Bob Leyton and Mike Zeck, Secret Wars was conceived as a means of bringing all of Marvel's biggest heroes together under one big storyline. Its story, chronicled for kids' TV in the nineties Spider-Man animated series, sees an entity known as the Beyonder transport all of Earth's mightiest heroes and villains to 'Battleworld', where they are to fight for the being's amusement.

Alliances are forged, broken, and Spidey even picks up some new black and white threads (later, it would transpire to be an evil symbiote, latching onto Eddie Brock when Pete has some church bell drama). It's the event comic that began all other event comics, and with a cosmic edge to boot, there's plenty that Infinity War owes to Shooter's one-time hit.

You never know, if a recent fan theory is to be believed, it could even have a hold over Infinity War's plot...

Advertisement
Content Producer/Presenter

WhatCulture's very own resident movie guy, Ewan has been working in the content creation biz for over 10 years now, having started as a freelance contributor to WhatCulture Gaming all the way back in 2015. After graduating with a First-Class Honours in History from Northumbria University in 2017 (where he won a prize for a totally killer dissertation on the Watergate years), Ewan took on the role of Comics Editor at WhatCulture and quickly developed WhatCulture Comics into one of the biggest superhero-focused channels on YouTube. He followed this with a brief hiatus at Screen Rant in 2021, where he worked across the Gaming and Film sections as a writer and editor, before returning to WhatCulture as a Senior Content Producer / Presenter in 2023. He started his own podcast, We Love Dad Movies, in 2022, and has contributed several written pieces to the Eisner-nominated comics website Shelfdust as well. In his current role, Ewan incorporates his love of cinema, comic books, and history into written pieces and video essays for WhatCulture's Film & TV channel, as well as WhatCulture Gaming and WhatCulture Horror, with a particular focus on nineties-era Dad Movies, old school Westerns, and Golden Age Hollywood Noir. John Carpenter is his fave, and he thinks Batman Beyond should never have been cancelled. If that's your vibe, you'll probably like his stuff.