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Age of Ultron
Age of Ultron #1 (May 2013)
Cover art by Bryan Hitch and Paul Neary
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
ScheduleThrice monthly (first 6 issues), twice monthly (last 4 issues)
FormatLimited series
GenreSuperhero
Publication dateMarch – June 2013
No. of issues10
Main character(s)Avengers
Hank Pym
Wolverine
Invisible Woman
Ultron
Avengers Unity Squad
Fearless Defenders
Creative team
Created byBrian Michael Bendis
Bryan Hitch
Written byBrian Michael Bendis
Artist(s)Bryan Hitch (#1-5, 10)
Brandon Peterson (#6-10)
Carlos Pacheco (#6-7, 9-10)
Butch Guice (#10)
Alex Maleev (#10)
David Marquez (#10)
Joe Quesada (#10)
Inker(s)Paul Neary (#1-5, 10)
Roger Bonet (#9-10)
Roger Martinez (#6-7, 9)
Tom Palmer (#10)
Letterer(s)Cory Petit
Colorist(s)Paul Mounts
Jose Villarrubia (#6-7, 9)
Richard Isanove (#10)
Editor(s)Tom Brevoort
Lauren Sankovitch

"Age of Ultron" (abbreviated AU) is a 2013 comic book fictional crossover storyline published by Marvel Comics that involved the conquest of the Earth by the sentient robot tyrant Ultron. The storyline consisted of an eponymous, 10-issue core miniseries, and a number of tie-in books.

The storyline was published between March and June 2013 and featured a storyline by Brian Michael Bendis. Artist Bryan Hitch provided the art for issues one through five, and Brandon Peterson for issues six through nine. Other artists who contributed to the series include Carlos Pacheco and Joe Quesada, the latter of whom drew part of the final issue.[1]

Marvel stated that all art for the series was completed before it was solicited, ensuring deadlines were met and that there were no more than thirteen tie-ins to the four-month event.[2]

This story takes place on two different Earths: the alternate Earth where Ultron annihilated humanity is referred to as Earth-61112, and the alternate reality where Morgan le Fay took over half the world is referred to as Earth-26111.

A sequel, Cataclysm, was released later in 2013.

The story arc's title served as an inspiration for the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) film Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), although the film does not directly adapt the events of the storyline. A free adaptation of the storyline's events later appeared in the MCU animated series What If...? (2021).

Publication history

[edit]

In 2011, Avengers Vol. 4 No. 12.1 featured a storyline where the Intelligencia find a crash-landed Spaceknight and try to power it back up. During a fight with the Avengers while they try to rescue Spider-Woman, the Spaceknight is powered up, revealing that it was Ultron in disguise. Ultron escapes, setting up the events of Age of Ultron.[3]

In mid-November, 2012, Marvel Comics released a cryptic teaser written "Age of Ultron" in binary code.[4] Three days later the event was officially announced, although by this point it had been over a year since the event had been originally announced.[2] The first of ten issues written by Brian Michael Bendis was released in March 2013 and ran through June of the same year.[1]

Neil Gaiman's Angela character was introduced into the Marvel Universe in the last issue of the Age of Ultron miniseries,[5] although the issue was shipped in a polybag to prevent other details of the story's ending from being publicized too early.[6] An Age of Ultron #10 A.I. one-shot by writer Mark Waid and artist Andre Lima Araujo will delve into the repercussions of the storyline for Hank Pym.[7] Following the conclusion of Age of Ultron, a new ongoing series titled Avengers A.I. by writer Sam Humphries and Andre Lima Araujo will launch in July.[8][9]

Plot

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Main story

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New York is in ruins. Ultron has returned and taken over the world, with Ultron Sentinels guarding the streets and looking for fugitives. After rescuing Spider-Man from the Owl and Hammerhead, Hawkeye takes him to an underground area beneath Central Park, where a small handful of other heroes have taken refuge.[10] Captain America has the idea to offer a hero to Ultron to be captured to infiltrate his base; Luke Cage and She-Hulk volunteer and Cage delivers She-Hulk to Ultron's forces. Cage is shocked when he discovers that they are going to negotiate with the Vision instead of Ultron.[11] The Vision reveals that Ultron is acting from the future using him as a conduit. She-Hulk is killed freeing Cage and the other superheroes flee Manhattan. Cage later dies from radiation poisoning, but is able to tell the heroes what he learned about Ultron.[12]

Meanwhile in San Francisco, a disfigured Black Widow meets with Moon Knight in one of Nick Fury's old bases to search for fail-safe plans Fury had for different apocalyptic scenarios.[13] The heroes regroup in the Savage Land, and Black Widow arrives with Moon Knight and Red Hulk, and they reveal Fury had a fail-safe plan to defeat Ultron should he conquer the world.[12] The heroes meet with Fury, whose plan is to use Doctor Doom's Time Platform to go into the future to defeat Ultron before he attacks the present. Iron Man, Captain America, Nick Fury, Red Hulk, Storm, Quake and Quicksilver go into the future, but Wolverine goes into the past to kill Henry Pym before he can create Ultron, and is followed by the Invisible Woman.[14] The Invisible Woman attempts to convince Wolverine to reconsider his plan, but he reminds her of the crimes Ultron will commit and kills Pym.[15]

The two return to the present to find the Savage Land covered in crashed ships, as in this timeline the war between the Kree and the Skrulls came to Earth. They go to New York and find it patrolled by three Helicarriers, and are attacked by the Defenders, who believe the two are Skrulls.[16] A cyborg Iron Man scans their minds and sees their timeline, and explains that the Avengers broke up after Pym's death and magic became triumphant over technology, and Morgan le Fay has conquered half the world. The two attempt to break out of the Defenders' Helicarrier when Morgan le Fey attacks with a swarm of Doombots. During the battle, le Fey crashes the other two Helicarriers into New York.[17] Most of the heroes are killed, and a dying Iron Man tells Wolverine he cannot go back in time to try and correct this again, as time is like a living organism that will break if ripped too much.[18]

In the past, the previous Wolverine is about to kill Pym when the new Wolverine stops him, and warns him that killing Pym will result in a disaster worse than Ultron. Pym says he will simply not build Ultron, but Wolverine realizes he must preserve the original timeline, and Pym decides to instead install a fail-safe to destroy Ultron when the time comes. The Invisible Woman and the two Wolverines go to the Savage Land, and the present Wolverine has his past self kill him, since he does not want to live with memories of the ruined future.[18] Months before Ultron's attack, Pym is working in his lab when he is given a package from the Invisible Woman: a recording of his past self, which he had somehow forgotten about, explaining an algorithm to destroy Ultron. The Avengers attack the headquarters of the Intelligencia to rescue Spider-Woman, the event that originally led to Ultron's reactivation. Once Ultron serves his purpose in the attack, Pym gives Iron Man the algorithm and it is uploaded into Ultron, destroying him.[19]

Wolverine and the Invisible Woman return to the present and find New York back to normal, but a massive shockwave across time and space seemingly shatters reality before putting it back together. At Avengers Tower, Giant-Man, Iron Man and Beast theorize that Wolverine's time travel journeys caused too much stress to the space-time continuum and has created tears across the multiverse. In the Ultimate Marvel universe, Miles Morales is out as Spider-Man when a flash of light reveals Galactus. High above Earth, Angela appears vowing revenge on whoever has pulled her from her world. In his lab, Pym has a realization on what went wrong and how he must fix it.[19]

Pym, having learned the full scope of events, reflects on his life and his personal struggles between pursuing practical scientific matters or whimsical flights of fancy. He contemplates suicide when he considers that his scientific pursuits resulted in the world's destruction by Ultron, but realizes that the future where Ultron was not created was worse, and takes this as proof he can be a force for positive change in the world. Thus he rededicates himself to superheroics as Ant-Man, a decision that satisfies both sides of his curiosity. In an epilogue, Pym looks upon an artificial intelligence built in the likeness of Doctor Doom, leading into the events of Avengers A.I.[20]

Tie-in books

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While traveling through time and space, the Fantastic Four are contacted by the Black Panther, who informs them that Ultron has taken over the Earth with an army of Ultron Sentinels. After returning to Earth, the team discovers that Manhattan is almost in ruins. While looking for survivors, they are attacked by the Ultron Sentinels. Mister Fantastic, the Human Torch, and the Thing seemingly die in the attack while the Invisible Woman escapes with She-Hulk where they join the resistance.[21]

While visiting her old friends George Smith (the former Stunt-Master) and Richard Fenster in San Francisco, Black Widow was spending the day with them. When a squadron of Ultron Sentinels start attacking San Francisco and killing people, Richard becomes one of the victims while Black Widow and George escape. Afterwards, George Smith's tech-prosthetic arm fell under Ultron's control and he started obeying Ultron. Black Widow was forced to kill George Smith and was partially disfigured in the process.[22] Captain Marvel is vacationing in London when the Ultron Sentinels invade. She fights them alongside Captain Britain and MI-13. After Computer Graham and Magic Boots Mel are killed, Captain Marvel and Captain Britain sacrifice their lives to destroy Ultron's main forces in London.[23]

Victor Mancha was bringing some children to one of the Runaways' old bases in Los Angeles. Victor believes that if he uses his machine abilities, he will help Ultron’s victory. He does not tell any of his new-found friends about his background because he is afraid they will not accept him. In a flashback, it is shown that his Runaways teammates were all killed by Ultron and that Victor has stored digital versions of them in his memory banks, but these files seem to be corrupted since they are telling him to become more machine and less human. The Ultron Sentinels find the hideout and start killing some of the kids whom Victor had saved. Victor decides to fight the Ultron Sentinels, deciding that if this is the end he will go down fighting.[24]

After being rescued by Hawkeye, Otto Octavius (whose mind secretly took over Spider-Man's body weeks before Ultron's attack) reflects on how the world has gone bad following Ultron's invasion. Iron Man finds him and persuades him to assist the heroes. Octavius' work at Horizon Labs could be a key element in defeating Ultron. While the heroes are planning a way to get into Ultron's fortress, Iron Man reveals to Otto a device he had developed during the time when he was the Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. The device in question can send a determined area through a portal into the Negative Zone, but lacks the Negative Zone tech to build the central device. The Baxter Building, which would have had the tech they needed, is gone, but Iron Man reveals that Max Modell has some of it at Horizon Labs. They plan to get inside Horizon so Otto can build the Central Device while Quicksilver places the remaining parts around Ultron's fortress. Otto and Quicksilver reach Horizon Labs, where Max Modell had died. Otto decides to prepare his own counter-plan instead of staying with Iron Man's plan. After activating his Spider-Bot and luring Ultron's minions to the lab, Otto uses his Spider-Bots to gain control over the Ultron Sentinels. He plans to use the Ultron Sentinels to infiltrate Ultron's fortress and defeat him. While reaching through what he believes is Ultron, Otto senses the pain and agony in the central unit is suffering. Otto suddenly realizes that it is not Ultron, but someone being manipulated by him. Ultron's defenses push Otto outside making him lose control of the Ultron Sentinels, forcing him to escape.[25]

After time-traveling to the past, and immediately after stealing Nick Fury's hovercar, Wolverine and Invisible Woman discuss the plan of confronting Henry Pym about his creation of Ultron, with Invisible Woman reminding Wolverine that they must keep their actions at a minimum or risk causing a massive butterfly effect. In the middle of the trip, their car breaks down, so they locate an underground S.H.I.E.L.D. base to find an energy cell for the car and return to their mission. Upon entering the base, they take separate paths with Wolverine heading for the energy cell while the Invisible Woman searches for Henry Pym's location. Wolverine bumps into a laboratory where a Brood creature was contained. Wolverine breaks it out of its confinement, but it attacks him and attempts to procreate inside his body. Wolverine fights the Brood creature and removes its offspring from his body. He then discovers that the other Brood creatures in the laboratory have started to evolve and adapt from the damage inflicted by Wolverine's attacks. Meanwhile, the Invisible Woman breaks into the surveillance room to find Henry Pym's location. She discovers that S.H.I.E.L.D. has been monitoring every location, including the Baxter Building. She then starts having doubts about crossing the line and wonders if she should tell the past version of Mister Fantastic that S.H.I.E.L.D. has been monitoring him. Once their work is done, they both leave the S.H.I.E.L.D. base and head off to search for Pym with the roles reversed: Logan attempting to reason with Pym and Sue determined to do whatever it takes.[26]

During the Apocalypse Twins' adolescences, Kang the Conqueror brings them from concentration camps to his palace in the year A.D. 4145. They are then dispatched on a mission to murder Colonel America at the time when history was altered by Wolverine and the Invisible Woman. The Apocalypse Twins' mission fails but they succeed in killing that reality's Havok and Rogue, who were the first lives they ever took. As punishment for their failure, Kang sends the Twins back to the concentration camps.[27]

In the divergent timeline created by Henry Pym's death, Morgana le Fey and her husband Doctor Doom conquer half the planet. Le Fey and Doom's daughter Caroline recruits Hippolyta to seek revenge for abandoning her as a child. In Latveria, Caroline and Hippolyta discover that Doctor Doom has died and has been replaced by Hippolyta's father Ares. Hippolyta defeats Ares and takes back command of the Amazons (who were subdued by Ares).[28]

Titles involved

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Title Issue(s) Citation(s)
Core miniseries
Age of Ultron #1-10 [29]
Tie-ins
Fantastic Four #5AU [29]
The Superior Spider-Man #6AU [29]
Avengers Assemble #14AU-15AU [30][31]
Wolverine & the X-Men #27AU [30]
Ultron #1AU [30]
Uncanny Avengers #8AU [31]
Fearless Defenders #4AU [31]
Epilogue
Age of Ultron #10AI [32]

Collected editions

[edit]
Title Material collected Published date ISBN
Age of Ultron (Hardcover) Age of Ultron #1-10, #10AI, Avengers Assemble #14AU-15AU, Fantastic Four #5AU, Fearless Defenders #4AU, Superior Spider-Man #6AU, Ultron #1AU, Uncanny Avengers #8AU, Wolverine & the X-Men #27AU September 2013 978-0785155652
Age of Ultron (Paperback) Avengers #12.1, Age of Ultron #1-10 May 2014 978-1846535406
Age of Ultron Companion Avengers Assemble #14AU-15AU, Fantastic Four #5AU, Fearless Defenders #4AU, Superior Spider-Man #6AU, Ultron #1AU, Uncanny Avengers #8AU, Wolverine & the X-Men #27AU, Age of Ultron #10AI May 2014 978-0785184850
What If? Age of Ultron What If? Age of Ultron #1-5 July 2014 978-0785190547
Age of Ultron vs. Marvel Zombies Age of Ultron vs. Zombies #1-4, Age of Ultron #1 November 2015 978-0785198635

Other versions

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What If?

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There is a five-issue What If? miniseries centered on the Age of Ultron storyline, four issues looking at what would have happened if one of the other original five Avengers - counting Captain America rather than the Hulk as a founder - had died instead of Pym, and a fifth looking at a world where Pym is the last surviving human under Ultron's reign. It is collected in paperback.[33]

Secret Wars (2015)

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The Ultron portion of the Age of Ultron appeared in the 2015 Secret Wars storyline as part of the series Age of Ultron vs. Marvel Zombies. The Age of Ultron's domain of Battleworld is called Perfection where it, the Deadlands (Marvel Zombies), and New Xandar (Annihilation Wave) are separated from the other Battleworld domains by the Wall, which keeps them contained from the other realities due to the dangers of their worlds. It is later established that this is not the Age of Ultron seen in the original storyline, but another world in which Ultron killed Pym immediately after achieving sentience. It eliminated Dane Whitman when he tried to infiltrate the Masters of Evil and killed the Avengers before creating a drone army that overwhelmed the remaining heroes.[34] Although the zombies and the Ultron drones eventually form an alliance by combining the two "species", a resistance to Ultron exists in the Deadlands, led by surviving heroes the Vision, Wonder Man, and Jim Hammond, who gather those exiled beyond the Wall into a secure city they have established. They eventually manage to rescue a version of Hank Pym exiled from a Wild-West-era zone.[35] He is able to use his counterpart's notes to devise a means of shutting down the hive mind of Ultron's drones at the cost of sacrificing the Vision and Wonder Man. Wonder Man's android lover is reconfigured so that she can die in Hammond's place.[36]

In other media

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Film

[edit]
  • The Marvel Cinematic Universe film Avengers: Age of Ultron features Ultron as the titular main antagonist[37] but the film is not based on the comic book, simply borrowing its title.[38] Nevertheless, the film does include a similarity from the comic, wherein the Avengers are driven underground by Ultron.

Television

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  • Season one of the animated Marvel Cinematic Universe / Disney+ series What If...? (2021) features an adaptation of the "Age of Ultron" storyline. In an alternate timeline depicted in the episode "What If... Ultron Won?", Ultron is successful during the events of Avengers: Age of Ultron; he transfers his consciousness into Vision's body and launches a nuclear holocaust that kills the human race, including most of the Avengers. He later kills Thanos and obtains all the Infinity Stones, using them to extend his campaign of destruction to other planets. After eliminating all life in the universe, Ultron feels that he no longer has a purpose, until he learns about the Watcher and the existence of other realities. After fighting the Watcher in the Nexus of All Realities, Ultron gains access to the entire Multiverse, and begins travelling to other timelines in order to destroy them as well. In the following episode, "What If... the Watcher Broke His Oath?", the Watcher assembles the Guardians of the Multiverse (consisting of alternate reality versions of Doctor Strange, Peggy Carter, T'Challa, Thor, Erik Killmonger, and Gamora, with a variant of Natasha Romanoff later joining them as well) to stop Ultron, and they ultimately manage to defeat him by uploading Arnim Zola's mind into his body, allowing Zola to delete Ultron's consciousness and take control of his body. Zola then tries to take the Infinity Stones for himself, and fights Killmonger, who wants to use the Stones to fix his own universe, but both are frozen in a pocket dimension by Strange and the Watcher. With the Multiverse saved, Strange resolves to guard Zola and Killmonger, while each Guardian returns to their native realities (excluding Romanoff, whom the Watcher brings to a universe where most of the Avengers were killed so that she could help the remaining heroes there).

References

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  1. ^ a b Schedeen, Jesse (March 8, 2013). "Joe Quesada Joins the Age of Ultron". IGN. Archived from the original on March 13, 2013. Retrieved March 23, 2013. Quesada will be back at the drawing board this year to help cap off Brian Michael Bendis' Age of Ultron miniseries. Quesada join regular series artists Bryan Hitch and Carlos Pachecho on Age of Ultron #10 this June
  2. ^ a b Phegley, Kiel (November 19, 2012). "Brian Bendis Prepares Age of Ultron For 2013". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
  3. ^ Avengers, Vol. 4 No. 12.1 (2011-04-27), written by Brian Michael Bendis.
  4. ^ "Marvel Goes Binary For The Age of Ultron". Comic Book Resources. November 16, 2012. Archived from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
  5. ^ Sunu, Steve (March 21, 2013). "Gaiman Returns to Marvel, Brings Spawn's Angela". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on March 23, 2013. Retrieved March 23, 2013. Later this year, writer Neil Gaiman makes his return to Marvel Comics...Perhaps even more intriguing is the announcement that Gaiman plans to introduce Angela to the Marvel U.
  6. ^ Ching, Albert (March 22, 2013). "More to Age of Ultron's Ending than Angela, Marvel Says". Newsarama. Archived from the original on March 25, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2013.
  7. ^ Alonso, Axel (April 19, 2013). "Axel-In-Charge: Mark Waid's Super Science Hits Age of Ultron #10A.I." Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on April 21, 2013. Retrieved April 21, 2013. So when the idea of doing a Hank Pym one-shot in the aftermath of "Age of Ultron" was thrown on the table at a conference, I leapt on that like black on a bowling ball. I love that character and had a really clear vision in my head of what that character could be.
  8. ^ Truitt, Brian (March 30, 2013). "Vision of the future: Avengers A.I. comes alive". USA Today. Archived from the original on April 2, 2013. Retrieved April 1, 2013. Marvel Comics' most notable robots, from the classic Avenger the Vision to a Doombot on the road to redemption, take center stage in Avengers A.I., a new ongoing series launching in July from writer Sam Humphries and artist Andre Lima Araujo and spinning out of Age of Ultron.
  9. ^ Schedeen, Jesse (March 29, 2013). "Marvel's New Post-Age of Ultron Avengers Series". IGN. Archived from the original on April 2, 2013. Retrieved April 1, 2013.
  10. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Hitch, Bryan (p), Neary, Paul (i). Age of Ultron, no. 1 (May 2013).
  11. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Hitch, Bryan (p), Neary, Paul (i). Age of Ultron, no. 3 (May 2013).
  12. ^ a b Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Hitch, Bryan (p), Neary, Paul (i). Age of Ultron, no. 4 (June 2013).
  13. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Hitch, Bryan (p), Neary, Paul (i). Age of Ultron, no. 2 (May 2013).
  14. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Hitch, Bryan (p), Neary, Paul (i). Age of Ultron, no. 5 (June 2013).
  15. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Peterson, Brandon; Pacheco, Carlos (p), Peterson, Brandon; Martinez, Roger (i). Age of Ultron, no. 6 (June 2013).
  16. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Peterson, Brandon; Pacheco, Carlos (p), Peterson, Brandon; Martinez, Roger (i). Age of Ultron, no. 7 (July 2013).
  17. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Peterson, Brandon (p), Peterson, Brandon (i). Age of Ultron, no. 8 (July 2013).
  18. ^ a b Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Peterson, Brandon; Pacheco, Carlos (p), Peterson, Brandon; Bonet, Roger (i). Age of Ultron, no. 9 (August 2013).
  19. ^ a b Bendis, Brian Michael (w), Maleev, Alex; Hitch, Bryan; Guice, Butch; Peterson, Brandon; Pacheco, Carlos; Marquez, David; Quesada, Joe (p), Maleev, Alex; Neary, Paul; Guice, Butch; Peterson, Brandon; Bonet, Roger; Palmer, Tom; Marquez, David; Quesada, Joe (i). Age of Ultron, no. 10 (August 2013).
  20. ^ Waid, Mark (w), Araujo, Andre Lima (p), Araujo, Andre Lima (i). Age of Ultron, no. 10 AI (August 2013).
  21. ^ Fraction, Matt (w), Andre Araujo (p), Andre Araujo (i). "The Death of the Family Richards During the Bloody Age of Ultron!" Fantastic Four, vol. 4, no. 5AU (May 2013).
  22. ^ Ewing, Al (w), Guice, Butch (p), Palmer, Tom (i). Avengers Assemble, no. 14AU (June 2013).
  23. ^ Ewing, Al (w), Guice, Butch (p), Palmer, Tom; Magyar, Rick (i). Avengers Assemble, no. 15AU (July 2013).
  24. ^ Immonen, Kathryn (w), Pinna, Amilcar (p), Pinna, Amilcar (i). Ultron, no. 1AU (June 2013).
  25. ^ Gage, Christos (w), Soy, Dexter (p), Soy, Dexter (i). "Doomsday Scenario" The Superior Spider-Man, no. 6AU (May 2013).
  26. ^ Kindt, Matt (w), Medina, Paco (p), Vlasco, Juan (i). "Age of Ultron: Road Trip" Wolverine and the X-Men, no. 27AU (June 2013).
  27. ^ Remender, Rick; Duggan, Gerry (w), Kubert, Adam (p), Kubert, Adam (i). Uncanny Avengers, no. 8AU (July 2013).
  28. ^ Bunn, Cullen (w), Jimenez, Phil (p), Kesel, Karl; McConnell, Aaron (i). Fearless Defenders, no. 4AU (July 2013).
  29. ^ a b c "Marvel Comics Solicitations for March, 2013". Comic Book Resources. December 12, 2012. Archived from the original on April 10, 2013. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
  30. ^ a b c "Marvel Comics Solicitations for April, 2013". Comic Book Resources. January 18, 2013. Archived from the original on May 16, 2013. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
  31. ^ a b c "Marvel Comics' Full May 2013 Solicitations". Newsarama. February 14, 2013. Archived from the original on March 11, 2013. Retrieved February 14, 2013.
  32. ^ "Marvel Comics Solicitations for June, 2013". Comic Book Resources. March 13, 2013. Archived from the original on March 15, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2013.
  33. ^ "Re-Write History in What If: Age of Ultron #1". Marvel Comics. March 28, 2014. Archived from the original on 2016-02-10. Retrieved 2014-11-22.
  34. ^ Robinson, James (w), Garney, Ron; Pugh, Steve (p), Pugh, Steve (i). "A Stranger Came To Town" Age of Ultron Vs. Marvel Zombies, no. 1 (August 2015).
  35. ^ Robinson, James (w), Grummett, Tom; Pugh, Steve (p), Hennessy, Andrew; Pugh, Steve (i). "Strange Bedfellows" Age of Ultron Vs. Marvel Zombies, no. 2 (September 2015).
  36. ^ Robinson, James (w), Pugh, Steve (p), Pugh, Steve (i). Age of Ultron Vs. Marvel Zombies, no. 5 (December 2015).
  37. ^ "SDCC 2013: Joss Whedon Reveals Avengers: Age of Ultron". Marvel Comics. July 20, 2013. Archived from the original on March 12, 2016. Retrieved July 21, 2013.
  38. ^ Plumb, Ali (July 23, 2013). "Exclusive: Marvel Chief Kevin Feige Talks Avengers: Age Of Ultron". Empire. Archived from the original on August 23, 2013. Retrieved July 23, 2013.
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