Things are starting to get a little complicated in Disney’s massive shared universes… but that may not be such a bad thing for fans of their parks.
For those unfamiliar, Disney owns two of the hottest intellectual property collections on the planet—Marvel Comics and Star Wars, two sagas so popular, they hardly need any introduction. These two storytelling giants share a number of common threads. Both have had an incredible influence on generations of fans, and both are notably present in Disney parks.
They are also both are trending towards going multiverse crazy…
What is a multiverse, you ask? It’s a term you’re likely to become familiar with soon, particularly thanks to Marvel. Multiverses are a longstanding theme in science fiction and comic books pondering what could happen if we discovered alternate universes parallel to our own—where slight changes in events throughout time result in radically different story outcomes.
Marvel has leaned hard into the concept of multiverses lately with the arrival of a new phase of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. This isn’t too much of a shock as multiverses have been a huge theme in Marvel Comics for decades. What’s more surprising is that Disney’s other mega-property, Star Wars, seems well on its way to joining the craze as well.
What does all this time/space travel convolution have to do with Disney parks you ask? More than you may think… Indeed, we’re starting to suspect that Disney might just choose to use a little multiverse madness to solve some of the biggest problems with two of their most popular lands…
Pondering the question, “What If?”…
Multiverses are an appealing plot device for a number of reasons. When executed properly, they can dramatically expand known story universes, as well as provide opportunities to retcon existing stories in creative ways.
What If? is a recent Disney+ show that follows the observations of The Watcher, an egg-headed celestial being with the power to view events across the Marvel multiverse (which may include the planet Mustafar from Star Wars? As we said, it’s getting complicated). Each of these alternate realities has spawned from variations in the Marvel timeline—things like Peggy Carter taking super serum instead of Steve Rogers or Dr. Strange falling into a terrifying quest for power to bring back a lost love.
We’ve seen the existence of the Marvel multiverse confirmed in films like Avengers: Endgame and shows like Loki, with more multiverse shenanigans soon to come in Spider-Man: No Way Home and Doctor Strange: Multiverse of Madness. The inclusion of the multiverse has heralded every bizarre story twist imaginable, from characters appearing back from the dead thanks to temporal doppelgangers, to figures from non-MCU Marvel films starting to appear, even to Loki having a variant version of himself that is literally an alligator.
An ever-expanding universe
Star Wars has several curious versions of a multiverse as well. The first one is a little mundane and actually came about as a byproduct of Disney’s purchase of Star Wars. Previous to 2012, a vast collection of books, comics, video games, and other content often called the Star Wars Expanded Universe existed telling the continued story of the Star Wars saga. After Disney bought Star Wars, these extra stories were relabeled as Star Wars: Legends, no longer considered “canon” in the same way as the films and shows like Clone Wars. Disney has since built an ever-growing collection of their own expanded universe content to rewrite Star Wars history as they please. This alone has resulted in two versions of the Star Wars timeline that seem to periodically intersect as Disney brings more and more classic expanded universe content into the new timeline.
You probably saw this coming, but they’ve also introduced an in-world Star Wars multiverse…
The most recent hint at this was in the excellent Disney+ series, Star Wars: Visions, which invited anime artists to produce a series of wholly unique short films set in an alternate Star Wars universe modeled after classic tropes from Japanese animation. There seem to be strong hints that Star Wars: Visions takes place in what is essentially a multiverse for Star Wars.
The other introduction of a multiverse in Star Wars happened on the show Star Wars: Rebels, and it is a doozy…
The World Between Worlds
The World Between Worlds is probably the most important story device ever introduced in Star Wars that many fans have never heard of… Be aware, some spoilers will follow.
Introduced in Star Wars: Rebels, the World Between Worlds essentially made time travel a real thing within Star Wars. After descending into an ancient Jedi Temple, Jedi-in-training Ezra Bridger located a mysterious door into an otherworldly plane of the Star Wars universe—a place comprised of a field of stars on a black sky, interlaced with pathways leading to portals where one could hear and see key moments throughout the Star Wars saga. While it initially seemed one could only view these moments as a spectator, to save the life of a friend, Ezra used one of the portals to intervene in a past moment, irreversibly changing Star Wars history.
Many fans believe the World Between Worlds made another appearance. At the end of The Rise of Skywalker, Rey sees a field of stars on a black sky and hears voices similar to those found in the World Between Worlds—the calls of Jedi throughout Star Wars history, including some who may not be dead. She is able to tangibly pull strength from this realm to face her final challenge.
Once again, why does this matter for Disney parks? Well, it could solve one of Disney’s biggest problems with Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge…
A Universal problem
Disney has suffered from several major problems related to Marvel and Star Wars. Let’s turn our focus back to Marvel for a minute.
Many fans have wondered why Disney hasn’t built more Marvel attractions at Walt Disney World, using these popular characters only at Disneyland Resort instead.
While Disney was finally able to move forward with opening Marvel Avengers Campus in Disney California Adventure in 2021, their prospects for using the invaluable characters of the MCU at Walt Disney World have remained extremely limited. So far, they’ve only used the Guardians of the Galaxy for attractions, shows, and character sightings since they fall outside of the umbrella of the Universal deal.
This raises a very important question: if Disney continues to introduce new characters connected specifically to the Marvel multiverse, could they eventually compile enough of these to produce an alternate version of Avengers Campus at Walt Disney World?
Theoretically, yes…
You would need a very specific set of factors to make such a plan work—specifically, characters that fans will flock to see that are not Spider-Man, Captain America, Thor, Doctor Doom, The Fantastic Four, The Hulk, etc. So far, the Guardians of the Galaxy have proven the only surefire winners for Disney to latch onto as subjects for attractions in Walt Disney World. However, with Disney’s roster of characters continuing to expand—partially thanks to the multiverse plot device—they could eventually assemble their own version of Avengers Campus, focusing on a group of “East Coast Avengers” with characters like Shang Chi, Captain Carter, Captain Marvel, and the gazillion variants of Loki.
A solution for the biggest problem with Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge has suffered from an entirely different series of problems—primarily surrounding a fickle fanbase and controversy regarding the new Star Wars trilogy.
Disney Imagineers did something truly spectacular with Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge—they set the land on a fully unique planet (Batuu) in a specific spot on the official Star Wars timeline. Specifically, your visit to the Black Spire Outpost takes place on a tumultuous day in between The Last Jedi and The Rise of Skywalker when the First Order finally catches up to the Resistance, setting off The Battle of Batuu (which you see on Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance—the battle that got General Hux demoted by the next film). This was an extremely cool idea, one that added incredible depth to the immersiveness of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge.
The problem is Disney placed their bets on the wrong podracer–rather, the wrong spot in the Star Wars timeline…
While the new Star Wars trilogy has proven extremely divisive for fans, the Disney+ series The Mandalorian has been almost universally celebrated (along with pretty much everything put out by genius duo, Dave Filoni and Jon Favreau). The Mandalorian has quickly spawned its own rich corner of the Star Wars universe, and many fans have asked if Disney needs to just cut their losses and retheme Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge accordingly.
There are, understandably, huge problems that would prevent Disney from doing this, both with the expenses of such an undertaking, as well as with the fact that the most popular attraction in Disney history—Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance—is unapologetically themed after the new trilogy, along with Disney’s new ultra-immersive resort experience, Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser. It’s a serious dilemma—the land is built on immersion locked in a specific spot on the Star Wars timeline, so you can’t just add on a Mandalorian expansion without breaking that immersion.
Or could you?…
Thanks to the World Between Worlds, Disney actually has an in-world means to bridge the gap between different spots in the Star Wars timeline. We already know that a Jedi Temple exists on Batuu (according to companion books like Star Wars: Black Spire). Disney could build this temple as part of an expansion to Galaxy’s Edge. With a Jedi Temple in place, it isn’t completely implausible that Disney could integrate the concept of the World Between Worlds to offer guests “portals” to enter other eras in the Star Wars timeline.
The ramifications of this change of tactics could be massive. Not only could it allow Disney to add a Mandalorian themed expansion onto Galaxy’s Edge—it could provide a means to access any corner of the Star Wars saga, from tales of the Old Republic to the classic trilogy. It’s an idea that positively brims with possibilities for Disney magic, one that already flows with the same logic followed by most Disney parks.
Will Disney do it, though?
This is the ultimate question, isn’t it?
There are several factors at play that work against the idea of Disney using the Marvel and Star Wars multiverses to expand their lands. The most pressing issue is the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. Disney took some major hits during the long closures of their parks, and we’ve already seen changes at Walt Disney World and Disneyland that may become permanent fixtures. Budgets are being relentlessly tightened, projects are being cut, and Imagineers are more frustrated than we’ve seen in years both by upper management’s focus shift to Disney+ over the parks, as well as by the recent forced move of Disney’s Imagineering to Lake Nona, FL.
It would take a big budget, conviction, and some extremely bold and creative minds to implement expansions at Disney parks based on the Marvel or Star Wars multiverses. The possibilities are there, and some are extremely promising—like using the World Between Worlds to open pathways to other portions of the Star Wars timeline or leaning into an East Coast version of Avengers Campus that doesn’t need the characters utilized by Islands of Adventure.
The temptation during this trying season is going to be for Disney to play it safe. We’ve already seen a consistent trend in the management of Star Wars that one half of the company continues to try to maneuver fans into just accepting Disney’s new vision for Star Wars, typified in the new trilogy. Despite their efforts, fans are instead continuing to clamor for more content like Filoni and Favreau’s Mandoverse—content Disney hasn’t even touched within Galaxy’s Edge except via Easter eggs.
As for Marvel, it seems Disney is still waiting to see what’s going to happen with Avengers Campus. While they managed to avoid some of the mistakes they endured with the opening of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, it seems unlikely Disney will want to put their necks on the line and navigate poking the sleeping bear of Universal Orlando Resort by taking risks on multiverse-content to produce another Marvel land on the east coast anytime soon.
Still, these are very real possibilities, and Disney has surprised us before. In the meanwhile, we’ll just have to follow the news, and like The Watcher, ponder the question, “What if?”…
Enjoy this article? What additions to you want to see at Disney parks connected to Marvel and Star Wars? Let us know in Facebook or in the comments. Thanks for reading!