Difference between revisions of "Tesseract"

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* The cube can also broadcast power to some devices, such as the staff/sceptre that [[Loki]] wielded during his attempt to rule the Earth.
* The cube can also broadcast power to some devices, such as the staff/sceptre that [[Loki]] wielded during his attempt to rule the Earth.
* Directly handling the Tesseract is unsafe, although it can be done briefly without serious consequences. [[Red Skull|Johann Schmidt]] was apparently disintegrated when he held onto the cube for too long.
* Directly handling the Tesseract is unsafe, although it can be done briefly without serious consequences. [[Red Skull|Johann Schmidt]] was apparently disintegrated when he held onto the cube for too long.
==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:Tesseract power supply.png|Drawing energy from the Tesseract
File:Tesseract wormhole reversed.jpg|A remote-forced wormhole
File:Prolonged contact.png|Consequences of prolonged contact
</gallery>


[[Category: Marvel]]
[[Category: Marvel]]

Revision as of 19:55, 1 October 2014

The Tesseract

The Tesseract is an alien artifact in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. In appearance, it is a glowing translucent cube. It is one of six "Infinity Stones"; ancient objects of super-advanced alien technology.

Properties

  • With the right technology, power can be drawn from the cube in vast amounts. Swiss inventor Arnim Zola was able to use its energy to power everything from directed-energy handguns to strategic bombers and WMDs.
  • With the right technology, the cube can be used to open wormholes to distant locations, such as a rift between Earth and Chitauri space. By unspecified means, it is also possible to force the Tesseract to open a wormhole remotely, but the resulting wormhole is unstable, and transit through such an unstable wormhole is stressful.
  • The cube can also broadcast power to some devices, such as the staff/sceptre that Loki wielded during his attempt to rule the Earth.
  • Directly handling the Tesseract is unsafe, although it can be done briefly without serious consequences. Johann Schmidt was apparently disintegrated when he held onto the cube for too long.

Gallery