How Thanos Won 14,000,604 Times - Finally Revealed
Video Statistics and Information
Channel: The Canadian Lad
Views: 3,464,330
Rating: 4.8760276 out of 5
Keywords: Avengers: Endgame, Avengers Endgame, Endgame, Thanos, How Thanos Won 14000604 Times - Finally Revealed, How Did Thanos Win 14 Million Times, Thanos Hidden Easter Egg, Thanos Hidden Detail, Avengers Endgame Hidden Detail, Hidden Detail Revealed, Endgame Hidden Details, Thanos Theory, Thanos vs Iron Man, Thanos vs Doctor Strange, Avengers: Infinity War, Infinity War, Infinity War Thanos vs Endgame Thanos, Why Thanos Lost in Endgame, The Canadian Lad, TCL
Id: ySoLERLz5w0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 4min 52sec (292 seconds)
Published: Sun Nov 15 2020
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there really had to be a video for this? he just murders them all lol
What a broken theory. He says that only one timeline has Thanos change his will. How tf does he know this? It might have happened in 12 million of the other timelines. Also, we know it's not the only one. Dr Strange's line about how "if I tell you what happens, it won't happen" confirms this, as it means there's a timeline split there, after Thanos' will changes. Theories need to remember how important these timelines are.
I'd like to think that They only win once because once was all they needed to win. Tony doesn't just snap his fingers once and save his reality, he saves all of them. The moment Tony snaps, the 14,000,604 other possibilities didn't even matter any more. Maybe there isn't enough evidence for this yet, but we'll see how it all turns out
Strange was not talking about different realities, he viewed possibilities how the upcoming conflict could go in his own reality. There are no 14 million Thanoses, we can sleep peacefully.
I donโt agree. He doesnโt change his mind when viewing the hologram. When he sees his head chopped off in the hologram he says โand that is destiny fulfilledโ meaning he is happy it happened. He refers to destiny from the beginning of infinity war even stating himself as destiny. I think youโre right, he DOES change his mind, but only after travelling to the future to prevent the avengers from undoing his DESTINY. Just my thoughts
It's because he discovers the true cost of fulfilling his vision... he has to sacrifice the one thing he holds precious to his heart, his daughter.
Well, the reason Tony only sacrificed himself in one timeline is presumably because he was already killed in the others before he could make that sacrifice. But yeah, to quote Dr Strange, "if I tell you what happens, it won't happen." That's exactly what happened to 2014 Thanos.
I completely disagree with this theory.
Although I really dislike the direction that the script was written, it's pretty obvious that the script writers intended Iron Man to the true reason why Thanos finally lost in Endgame out of 14000605 realities.
Thanos becoming vengeful and merciless in Endgame marks a drastic character development from Infinity War, but it has no significant bearing and impact on the development of the story. I would argue that Thanos becoming a vengeful and merciless warlord hellbent on wiping out not just half, but the entire universe, was, pun intended, inevitable. Thanos in the MCU is a character that suffers from delusion of grandeur. He genuinely believes that he was the only one in existence with the mental and physical capacity to save the universe from certain doom of overpopulation by willing to use the Infinity Stones to erase half of existence. While his intention is arguably altruistic, he also fully expects the surviving half of the universe to one day finally understand his, in his mind, very logical reasoning and motive. While he may not seek fame or recognition for this "noble" endeavor (as evidenced by him living out his remaining life as a farmer), he never expected the surviving half of existence to hate him and see him as a villain.
In all of the 14000605 realities where Thanos wins, the survivors of his "Snap" would always seek him out for vengeance, may it be the Krees, Asgardians, or the Avengers. The result is always the same: Thanos is viewed by the surviving half of the universe not as its savior, but the penultimate villain, and this is something that Thanos can never understand. At the end, Thanos always makes the realization that in order to truly "save" the universe, he must wipe it out completely.
When Thanos said "I am inevitable." It was meant in every sense of the word. That version of Thanos becoming a vengeful and merciless warlord in Endgame with the new found goal of wiping out all of existence would always be inevitable in all realities.
The one variable that results in Thanos losing in that one reality portrayed in Endgame, then, is Iron Man. In all the 14000605 realities that Dr. Strange foresees, Iron Man fights Thanos and is killed on Titan, or perhaps somewhere else. The crucial detail is that in all of those 14000605 realities, Iron Man never survives Infinity War, and Thanos wins. Which is why Dr. Strange is willing to surrender his Time Stone to Thanos to ensure Stark's survival, because the one reality that Thanos lost, Tony Stark survives, and is able to help create the time machine to go back in time in the future, possess the Stones from the past, reassemble the Avengers and defeat Thanos by sacrificing himself on Earth.
I personally dislike how the script writers wrote Tony to be the crucial pin of the entire MCU, but this was undoubtedly the way they envisioned it.