"Acts of Vengeance" is a comic bookcrossover storyline running through several titles published by Marvel Comics from December 1989 to February 1990.
Publication history
This company-wide fall crossover was centered on the Avengers and Fantastic Four after three consecutive fall crossovers were built around the X-Men and related mutant teams. Promotional materials teased the idea of a wide array of super-villains facing heroes they had never met, or were not part of the heroes' regular rogues gallery.
A thematic sequel, Acts of Evil, was published in 2019, the 30th anniversary of Acts of Vengeance.
Plot summary
A mysterious stranger (the Asgardian god Loki in disguise) coerces a group of master supervillains to join forces in a conspiracy to destroy the superhero team the Avengers. Loki does this to strike back at his adopted brother Thor, and due to his bitterness that he inadvertently caused the formation of the Avengers.[16] The supervillain team consists of Doctor Doom, the Kingpin, Magneto, the Mandarin, the Red Skull, and the Wizard. Loki also attempts to recruit Apocalypse, Cobra, and the Mad Thinker, but they all decline. Loki also approaches Namor, but he rejects the offer stating he is not a villain anymore.
To assist the master villains, Loki engineers a jailbreak at the Vault. The lesser villains are then directed against heroes (mainly the Avengers and Spider-Man) who have never fought them before, the theory being that the unfamiliarity will act in the villains' favor.
While this does result in some unusual battles, the plan falls apart when the master villains fail to cooperate and instead bicker with each other. An example of this is where Magneto, a mutant and a Jewish Holocaust survivor, attacks the Red Skull, whose Nazi beliefs include a prejudice against mutants, and imprisons him in a buried crypt. The supervillain pawns are defeated by the heroes. A frustrated Loki reveals himself and imprisons the Red Skull, the Mandarin and the Wizard. Meanwhile, Doctor Doom is revealed to have been using a Doombot, the Kingpin makes a timely exit and Magneto is not present. The Avengers track the group and defeat the villains, with Thor forcing Loki to flee back to their home of Asgard.[17]
Loki commits one last act of villainy and fuses three Sentinels to form the robot Tri-Sentinel, so that it can destroy New York City. The Tri-Sentinel is stopped by Spider-Man, who at the time possessed the powers of Captain Universe.[18]
Other villains that Loki tried to get involved as members of the inner circle of major villains (but who turned him down) are Apocalypse, Cobra, and the Mad Thinker.
Issues and events
The following issues are listed in chronological order:
Thor #410 (one page only) - #411
The Mutant Misadventures of Cloak & Dagger #8 (one page only)
Avengers Spotlight #26
The New Mutants #84 - (two pages only) - #85
The following issues are approximately in reading order:
Avengers Spotlight #26
The New Mutants #86
X-Factor #50 (six pages only)
Damage Control (vol. 2) #1
The Avengers #311
Thor #410
Captain America #365
Fantastic Four #334
The Amazing Spider-Man #326
The Spectacular Spider-Man #158
Wolverine (vol. 2) #19-20
The Mutant Misadventures of Cloak and Dagger (vol. 3) #8-9
Web of Spider-Man #59
Power Pack #53
The Incredible Hulk #363
Marc Spector: Moon Knight #8-9
Doctor Strange, Sorcerer Supreme #11-12
Fantastic Four #335-336
The Amazing Spider-Man #327
The Spectacular Spider-Man #159
Web of Spider-Man #60
Doctor Strange, Sorcerer Supreme #13
Marc Spector: Moon Knight #10
Alpha Flight #79-80
Daredevil #275-276
Thor #411-412
Avengers West Coast #53
Quasar #5
Avengers Spotlight #27
Iron Man #251
The Amazing Spider-Man #328
The Spectacular Spider-Man #160
Web of Spider-Man #61
Uncanny X-Men #256-257
The Avengers #312
The Punisher (vol. 2) #28-29
The Punisher War Journal #12-13
Captain America #366
The Mutant Misadventures of Cloak and Dagger #10
Iron Man #252
Avengers West Coast #54
Quasar #6-7
Avengers Spotlight #28
The Avengers #313
Captain America #367
Avengers Spotlight #29
Avengers West Coast #55
The Uncanny X-Men #258
The Amazing Spider-Man #329
The Incredible Hulk #369
Web of Spider-Man #62-63
Damage Control (vol. 2) #2-4
Web of Spider-Man #64-65
The Avengers Annual #19
Note: Iron Man #250 has the "Acts of Vengeance!" logo on its cover, but has nothing to do with the crossover.
Collected editions
Title
Material collected
Published date
ISBN
Acts of Vengeance Omnibus
Avengers #311-313, Annual #19, Avengers Spotlight #26-29, Avengers West Coast #53-55, Captain America #365-367, Iron Man #251-252, Quasar #5-7, Thor #411-413, Mutant Misadventures of Cloak And Dagger #9, Amazing Spider-Man #326-329, Spectacular Spider-Man #158-160, Web of Spider-Man #59-61
Fantastic Four #334-336, Incredible Hulk #363, Punisher #28-29, Punisher War Journal #12-13, Marc Spector: Moon Knight #8-10, Daredevil #275-276, Power Pack #53, Damage Control #1-4, material from Doctor Strange, Sorcerer Supreme #11-13, Web of Spider-Man #64-65, Wolverine #19-20, Alpha Flight #79-80, New Mutants #86, Uncanny X-Men #256-258, material from X-Factor #50
Avengers Spotlight #26-28, Avengers #311-313, Quasar #5-7, Iron Man #251-252, Avengers West Coast #53-55, Mutant Misadventures of Cloak And Dagger #9, material from Captain America #365-367, Thor #411-413, Avengers Annual #19, Avengers Spotlight #29
Fantastic Four #334-336, Incredible Hulk #363, Punisher #28-29, Punisher War Journal #12-13, Marc Spector: Moon Knight #8-10, Daredevil #275-276, Power Pack #53, Damage Control #1-4, material from Doctor Strange, Sorcerer Supreme #11-13
Storylines are listed in publication order. Publications are listed alphabetically by published titles. Compiled without respect for canon or "current" continuity.