Video Link: /watch/P_RI53CcvQs
Alex used the remote and went onto the YouTube app and typed "A bit of Everything" in its searchbar and clicked on the channel. Under "Videos", he filtered it under "Oldest" and scrolled down until he found a video called "MCU Timeline vs. Release Watch Order".
The video shows a picture of a young boy, Gabriel, A bit of Everything's son, doing things at school.
A bit of Everything: Hello, everyone, uh, this channel is normally devoted to comedy videos or videos of my son, Gabriel, but not today. The next set of pictures shows a Marvel Cinematic Universe Watch Order: Chronologically or Release Date, as it shows the World War II Steve Rogers / Captain America, Carol Danvers / Captain America, Tony Stark / Iron Man from Iron Man (2008), Bruce Banner / Hulk from The Incredible Hulk (2008), Tony from Iron Man 2 (2010), Thor from Thor (2011), and a tiny glimpse (blink and you'll miss it) of the original Avengers from The Avengers (2012) (only Natasha Romanoff / Black Widow) is seen. Below this picture, was a Marvel Studios timeline book. In the corner read "Phase One", "Phase Two", "Phase Three", and "Phase Four", respectively. Each had a color palette of the phase number, with teal having one for Phase 1, red having two for Phase 2, orange having three for Phase 3, and purple having four for Phase 4, respectively. Today, we're going to look at another passion of mine, which is the Marvel Cinematic Universe. However, if you did come to see a cute video of Gabriel, I won't be offended if you don't continue watching. But, if you like the MCU as much as I do, then this is the video for you. We are going to cover how to watch the story of Marvel Studios: should you watch it chronologically or in release date order and I am hoping by the end of this video I will convince you that there is only one answer and that is chronological. But, we'll have to see if I convince you by the end. Also, before we can talk about how to watch it chronologically, we have to figure out, you know what is the order? So, let's look to see whether Marvel has given us any clues as to what the order is to watch these movies. We see the original MCU Timeline up to The Avengers (2012). Uh, around the time that Avengers came out, Marvel released this very detailed graphic. I am not expecting that you can read anything here but if you are interested in diving into it, you can find it on the Internet and zoom in, but it's a very, very helpful graphic that lays out all of the Phase One movies, almost scene-by-scene at times to tell you the order that they occurred but what it really indicates that Marvel, from the very beginning was thinking about how all these movies fit together and how you would watch them chronologically if you were interested. He highlights a specific point of the timeline. Also, this graphic mentions Fury's Big Week, which is that week span a good portion of Iron Man 2, The Incredible Hulk, and Thor all occur. Uh, it's day by day it is a crazy sequence, um, and really interesting that Marvel laid it out that way and called it out from the beginning and you can actually see some of this as you watch the movies. You see Coulson leaving Iron Man to go, uh, discover Thor, you see at one point on a screen in Iron Man 2, you see one of the battles of the Hulk being mentioned, so the movies really did occur simultaneously and it's just interesting to see it all laid out. But if you notice, the doesn't go into the year that things occur. Instead, it just lists the order that they occur because the assumption is that every movie occurred in the same year it was released. However, (the next set of photos show the Marvel Studios magazine celebrating 10 years of the MCU, with a section being shown from a website listing off the years of the MCU timeline (1943–1945: Captain America: The First Avenger; 2010 (when it really was 2009): Iron Man; 2011 (actually 2010): Iron Man 2, The Incredible Hulk, Thor; 2012: The Avengers, Iron Man 3; 2013: Thor: The Dark World; 2014: Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Guardians of the Galaxy, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2; 2015: Avengers: Age of Ultron, Ant-Man; 2016: Captain America: Civil War, Spider-Man: Homecoming; 2016–2017: Doctor Strange; 2017: Black Panther (actually it takes place during 2016), Thor: Ragnarok (some parts take place during 2018 as Thor and Loki spend about eight months on Sakaar), and Avengers: Infinity War (actually it takes place during 2018), respectively)) when Marvel moved to their 10-year anniversary, they released this information which did kind of change around some of the assumptions we had at this point. For example, Iron Man (he highlights Iron Man) is listed as coming out (notices his mistake), or sorry, as listing as occurring in 2010 so, Marvel scrunched the timeline a little bit and, uh, brought Iron Man forward by two years. Now, I know some people still believe it happened earlier but you know, you got to trust Marvel if that's what they're saying happen, then that's what happened and it does align with the fact that Iron Man 2 is mentioned to occur six months after Iron Man so that fits well. One of the interesting things, too, that Marvel pretty much admitted to (a highlight and a line to Spider-Man: Homecoming with a note reading "8 years") is that the infamous "eight years later" graphic that shows up in Homecoming is absolutely incorrect and we knew it was incorrect, we knew it hadn't been eight years between Homecoming and Avengers, but Marvel admitted to it and you know, in this timeline solidifies that it was just four years, not eight. However, it's not the first time or the only time that eight years occurred in a movie and was incorrect in Civil War. Vision mentions it's been eight years since, uh, Iron Man first entered the scene, you know, the infamous "I am Iron Man" line, but by moving Iron Man up two years, it's no longer eight years, it would have been eight years in 2008 but now it's only six. Now, maybe Vision was rounding up, who knows?
"It was actually seven years but I was rounding up." Vision said.
A bit of Everything: But, either way, basically, if a movie mentions an eight-year time span, it's probably not right but with that being said, having these years laid out do sync out many times for instance, Ross in Civil War mentions it's been four years since The Avengers and in Thor: Ragnarok, Thor mentions it's been two years since Age of Ultron, basically that's how long Banner had been the Hulk, so it's nice to see for the most part once, they have nailed down these years, they've pretty much stuck with them and they fit really well. However, there are a few things that Marvel got wrong here and admitted to later, the first being Avengers: Infinity War. It is not in 2017 as we now know it's 2018. And there are several reasons for this, now the least of which are some references in the movie itself you know, the movie alludes to it being two years since Civil War when Vision mentions that that's howlong he and the Scarlet Witch have been dating, uh, also Iron Man, uh, Tony Stark alludes to the fact that you know, Thanos has been in his head for the last six years and that of course is alluding to The Avengers so you know, none of these dates work unless Infinity War is in 2018 with Marvel officially eventually moving to 2018. And, then the other issue is that Black Panther is listed as happening in 2017 when in reality, it happened right after Civil War. It basically picks up right after the movie ended so this is something also that we'll see that Marvel ends up correcting. But it is nice that Marvel has used these dates consistently going forward. For example, in Endgame, they mentioned the year that Avengers, Thor: The Dark World, and Guardians of the Galaxy occur during the Time Heist and they stuck with these same years so, while I'm not convinced Marvel really has a firm grasp on all the time frames of the movies from day one. It's clear that once they try to put their line in the sand and say "Here are the years", they've tried to stick to it and they've been really consistent going forward. We then see a screenshot of the Disney MCU timeline, with Captain America: The First Avenger first, followed by the Agent Carter Marvel One-Shot, Captain Marvel, Iron Man, Iron Man 2, the Marvel One-Shot A Funny Happened On the Way to Thor's Hammer, Thor, the Marvel One-Shot The Consultant, The Avengers, the Marvel One-Shot Item 47, Thor: The Dark World, Iron Man 3, the Marvel One-Shot All Hail the King, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Guardians of the Galaxy, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Avengers: Age of Ultron, Ant-Man, Captain America: Civil War, Black Widow, Black Panther, Doctor Strange, Thor: Ragnarok, Ant-Man and the Wasp, Avengers: Infinity War, Avengers: Endgame, Loki, What If...?, WandaVision, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, Eternals, Hawkeye, and Moon Knight. So, next, a big jump occurred, an exciting thing occurred with Disney's release, Disney, if you're not a subscriber, what are you waiting for? It's fantastic. But, Disney, if you're a subscriber, you can go to the Marvel Cinematic Universe in timeline order and it lists all of the movies and TV shows and how they all should be watched if you want to watch them chronologically. I want to call out that is the one that created this graphic. is a fantastic Marvel resource, they're also on Twitter, but their website has all kinds of good information and they created this real nice graphic because on Disney, it's a long timeline going horizontally and they've you know, condensed it really nicely here so I had to use it and give them a little credit but I will point out that not every movie is in here. Some of the movies (we see a picture of The Incredible Hulk and the three MCU Spider-Man movies, Spider-Man: Homecoming, Spider-Man: Far From Home, and Spider-Man: No Way Home), in particular, The Incredible Hulk, the three Spider-Man movies, uh, also are not in the timeline because Marvel/Disney doesn't have the rights to show them on Disney. You know, Hulk is owned by Universal and of course, the Spider-Man movies are managed by Sony. Now, supposedly there's an agreement that eventually the Spider-Man movies will appear on Disney and so therefore will appear in the timeline. Unsure if the Hulk will ever make it but sure it would be nice but we do have an idea when Marvel says these movies occurred but if we look back at their timeline from that they released in the 10-year anniversary, that they list The Incredible Hulk happening between Iron Man 2 and Thor and since, they all kind of happen at the same time, it also doesn't matter, I mean technically The Incredible Hulk might have started a little bit before Iron Man 2 but they're all in the same time frame so we'll go with that since that's what Marvel's told us and then Spider-Man: Homecoming obviously happens after Civil War and before Doctor Strange so going with these placements we can put The Incredible Hulk after Iron Man 2 and we can put Spider-Man: Homecoming probably after Black Panther and before Doctor Strange although it really could fit anywhere after Civil War and then we know that that Far From Home and No Way Home fit after Eternals because they happen over the summer break the year after Endgame and we know it happened before Hawkeye, which happened the Christmas afterEndgame so we can kind of place those but it'll be really when they all show up on the timeline. Some other interesting things in the timeline is that Marvel switched the order of Iron Man 3 and Thor: The Dark World. Um, you know, you really could watch him in either order. But, it is interesting because the beginning of Thor: The Dark World does take place after Avengers so you could argue it's a nice continuation to see Loki being taken off to Asgard in chains. Now, the rest of Thor: The Dark World ironically happens after Iron Man 3 but, still I think, Marvel, you know, probably has the right idea here by Thor: The Dark World first in the watch order. Marvel also fixed the issue with Black Panther. If you remember, they had Black Panther happening later and now they've moved it to become you know, real close after Civil War and then, one other thing I'll mention that I just think is cool is all of the One-Shots are now on Disney. They used to only be on the CD or DVD release, I'm sorry, the DVD or Blu-Ray release of certain movies and now they're on Disney, which is great and they have stuck them in the timeline order which is really good. So, uh, a huge asset to have this. Now, let's take a deep dive into, uh, the next aspect of the chronology, sorry, chronology, which is month by month. It shows a screenshot of the "2013" page on the Marvel Cinematic Universe Wiki. (See it here by clicking on the link: marvel./wiki/2013) Now, at no point, has Marvel ever released when they think Marvel will happen month by month so we won't have that resource from Marvel but there is a fantastic asset out there called the Marvel Cinematic Universe Wiki. It is so amazingly detailed, I mean, they have spent the time to break every movie and TV show down, not just by year, but by month and by day, it is an unbelievable amount of information so while it is not official, it's still... you're not going to get any better resource than this, where they've taken this much time to try to figure out exactly when everything happened so I wanted to give them credit because I am going to use their monthly breakdown, not the daily, because that is so detailed but the monthly breakdown at least, uh, and you know, if you get a chance to go check out their, uh, website because it really is fantastic. All right so, before we get into the actual order that I would recommend you watch, I want to try to really convince you why you should watch chronologically, so, (yellow text appears, reading "Why you should watch the MCU in chronological order" with bullet points appear, reading "Phase 1 works better that way: Tesseract, Super-Soldier Serum, Phil Coulson, Kree twist is a surprise", "Civil War Fallout is very clear", "Black Widow's story is more impactful", "Back to Back movies sork better", "Blip is better handled", and "There are no 'I am your father' moments", respectively) let's look at several different reasons that I believe that the um, watch order, is way, way better, so let's start with Phase One, several aspects here ("Tesseract" is highlighted in red, showing Red Skull holding the Tesseract, Goose puking up the Tesseract, Tony looking at a drawing of the Tesseract, Fury showing Selvig the Tesseract, and the Tesseract opening a portal), let's start with the Tesseract. The Tesseract is practically its ownMarvel character, I mean it appeared in five movies during what is essentially Phase One, uh, if you consider Captain Marvel to be a Phase One movie, uh, based on its chronological watch, uh, I'll be honest, I was confused by the Tesseract when I watched the movies the first time but when I watched it in chronological order, it makes so much more sense. You go from it appearing in Captain America: The First Avenger, then appearing in Captain Marvel, then appearing in Iron Man 2 in the drawings that Tony Stark is searching, then the end credits to Thor and, finally, in The Avengers. It just made so much more sense so that's a big reason. We then see "Super-Soldier Serum" highlighted in red, as we see pictures of a muscular Steve Rogers and Emil Blonsky receiving a modified version of the Super Soldier Serum. Along the same line, the Super Soldier Serum and not as important to watch in order but still it has a little more meaning when you watch Captain America: The First Avenger followed by The Incredible Hulk. It just, you know, has a little more impact to know exactly what that Super Soldier Serumis. "Phil Coulson" is highlighted with red as pictures show a younger Phil Coulson in Captain Marvel while showing Phil meeting Pepper in Iron Man. Phil Coulson. If you follow his journey, I think it is a little more impactful to see him first in Captain Marvel to meet him to learn about his relationship with Fury and then to see him in Iron Man because when he pops up in Iron Man, you're like "Wait, this guy is important!" vs. the first time you watch Iron Man, you might just kind of ignore him because he doesn't seem to have a real point until near the end so I think the order, this order gives Phil Coulson's story a lot more meaning. "Kree twist is a surprise" is highlighted with red as we see pictures of Korath and Ronan the Accuser. Uh, the Kree twist. I'm not going to mention what it is in case people haven't watched the movies yet but let's just say there is a big twist that's revealed eventually but that if you watch Guardians of the Galaxy before Captain Marvel, then the twist doesn't really have any meaning but instead if you watch Captain Marvel first and then Guardians of the Galaxy, uh it's just much more of a surprise to really understand, uh, you know, the full story behind the Kree, I just wish I won't say anymore but let's just say order makes more sense that way. "Civil War Fallout is very clear" is highlighted with red, as pictures show the clash at the airport, Black Widow breaking out Alexei from prison, Black Panther standing up to Killmonger's army, and Tony showing Peter his new Iron Spider armor. The Civil War fallout, I think it's just fantastic to watch Civil War followed immediately by Black Widow, Black Panther, and Homecoming, you see how all of these characters' lives were drastically impacted and many more were drastically impacted by the Civil War battle. "Black Widow's story is more impactful" is highlighted with red as pictures of Black Widow: one from Civil War, one from Black Widow, and one from the final scene of Black Widow. And speaking of impact, we have Black Widow's story, which is much more impactfulif you watch Civil War, then Black Widow, then Infinity War and again, I won't go into detail why just in case people have not watched those movies yet but, just trust me that it makes so much when you watch them in that way. "Back to Back movies work better" is highlighted with red as we see pictures of the first two Guardians movies, Far From Home and No Way Home, and Infinity War and Endgame. Uh, the back-to-back movies just work better when you watch them back-to-back. You know, Guardians 1 and 2 are basically a continuation of each other, clearly, Far From Home and No Way Home are directly tied to each other and of course, Infinity War and Endgame are a package set. However, if you watch it in release order, there are sometimes two, three, four, you know, seven, eight movies in between, uh, movies and TV shows in between, so this order I think is way better in that regard. "Blip is better handled" is highlighted with red as we see pictures of Monica waking up in the hospital, Sam confronting the GRC councilmembers, Shaun and Katy having dinner with their friend, the Eternals discussing how the Blip is having an impact on the Emergence, Betty explaining the rules of the Blip, and the band coming back five years later. Uh, I think the Blip is handled a lot better, you know, Homecoming was the first movie release wise, sorry, Far From Home was the first movie release-wise to come out after Endgame and Far From Home kind of, you know, joked about the Blip, which was a little abrupt, considering you know the impact of it,
Everybody cringed at the band scene.
A bit of Everything: however, if you watch it in chronological order that means, you would first watch WandaVision and you know, see firsthand, uh, what the individual impact is to the Blip, then you watch Falcon and the Winter Soldier and you see the fallout with the GRC and how important that is and finally by Shang-Chi time, you're ready for a conversation over dinner about the Blip and the impact and moving beyond it, Eternals, uh, goes into one of the major ramifications of the Blip and finally, then you hit Far From Home and you know, you are ready to laugh about it, then, so, I think this order just really works better. "There is no 'I am your father' moments" is highlighted with red as we see a picture of Darth Vader telling Luke about his destiny as his son. And the last thing I'll say is that there are no "I am your father" moments
"What's that supposed to mean?" Anakin and Luke asked, crossing their arms.
"Uh..." A bit of Everything started to say.
A bit of Everything: And what I mean by that is, you know, there's the eternal debate: do you watch the episodes four, five, and six trilogy and then watch one, two, and three prequels or do you watch the prequels and then four, five, and six because obviously The Empire Strikes Back has a big twist in it that you know depending on the order you watch the movies, it is or isn't a big surprise, well my point is, there is no "I am your father" moment in the Marvel Universe, watching them in chronological order won't ruin any surprises, now, some of you might be saying "Hey, wait, what about the end-credits scenes?". I agree, the end-credits scenes can be an issue and I will discuss that in a moment but I'm talking about the main movies themselves, the movies don't really have a moment where you'll regret watching it in a different order than the original release order, so, you know for these reasons, I just believe that it is much better to watch in chronological order and I would welcome people to give it a try and to see, I recently watched everything in chronological order to get ready for the new Doctor Strange movie and I just really enjoyed it. All right, so, (a screenshot of a document appears) one last thing about before we get to the recommended order to watch the MCU is to talk briefly about the things that aren't canon or are MCU-adjacent, meaning part of the multiverse, but not the main universe, so first, the TV shows, well, believe it or not, Marvel Studios in just eight years, put out 37 seasons and 468 episodes worth of TV, that is incredible, however, at this point, none of it is considered main MCU. Now, you might suddenly be saying "Wait a minute, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Agent Carter, and the Netflix shows, aren't those close to canon, if not canon?". I mean, you could argue they are because we've seen Daredevil and Kingpin, Wilson Fisk show up, but Marvel still doesn't have them in their timeline, Marvel has them in a separate category and I think it's because they're still trying to decide how much of those series they want to make canon and of course, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and Agent Carter, you know, they just have not considered them canon up to this point, Agent Carter was a great series but if you notice in the timeline, they don't have Agent Carter, they have the One-Shot, so very interesting, so we'll see eventually those may become canon but for now, I have left them out but I give them a special mention here. Then, let's look at the movies there's many more movies that came out that are Marvel than these, but these are the ones that at least people are really paying attention to right now and that would be the X-Men movies, the Spider-Man movies, and the Fantastic Four movies, X-Men and Fantastic Four are simply up in the air right now, there's simply no way they're part of the main Marvel universe, they would have to be, maybe, in the multiverse, but they, if they even happened at all, so those are really up in the air. Now, the Sony movies, the Spider-Man movies, as we now know, those have been established to be sure in the multiverse, not the main universe, but in the multiverse, so I would recommend watching all of them right before Far From Home, uh, sorry, No Way Home, actually either, uh, well watch them right around that time, but the exact order doesn't matter, you could just binge watch all of those movies at once, the only thing to keep an eye out for are the end-credits and notice I've got some footnotes here. Venom: Let There Be Carnage, its end-credits scene technically happens during the first act of Spider-Man: No Way Home, but honestly, since it was released before No Way Home anyway, there's no spoiler if you watch it and it kind of gets you excited about "Oh! What's going to happen in this movie?". Morbius, on the hand, its end-credits scenes definitely happen after Spider-Man: No Way Home, so you should skip them, watch the movie before No Way Home, but skip the end-credits scenes until after watching No Way Home, so I just wanted to give a brief mention to these, I think over time, you know more and more of this may become part of the main MCU or at least part of the multiverse, but for now really, just those Spider-Man movies are all you have to watch but without further ado, this is what I would recommend to be the main, uh, universe, main MCU, uh, movies and TV shows chronological order, I do understand there's a lot going on here, so I apologize but I do think it's helpful to see it all at once when you break it up with a lot of pictures and across multiple pages, it just gets hard to digest, at least in its fullness, so I have put it on one page but, uh, let me point out that I–I have broken it by The Avengers movies when you binge watch if you watch all these, it's good to take a break and The Avengers movies are as good as any reason to take a break, now you might say "Well, the Phases are where we should take a break but something interest about watching in chronological order, the Phases have a lot less meaning, so, for example, Captain Marvel came out in Phase Three but happens in Phase One, Guardians of the Galaxy – Part 2 came out in Phase Three but happens in Phase Two, Black Widow came out in Phase Four but happens in Phase Three and Spider-Man: Far From Home came out in Phase Three but really happens in Phase Four, in fact, very deep into Phase Four, so, I don't know that the phases have as much meaning anymore and really The Avengers movies make the nice break, so that you're not just feeling like it's one giant thing, also, I'm just going to point out that I indented the One-Shots and I indented the TV shows, no reason other than just visually to make them stand out from the movies, which again breaks this up because it is a very busy slide so that's why those are indented, now notice we have the month and the year, as I mentioned earlier, the month comes from the Wiki, not from Marvel, but the year, you know Marvel has either given us all these years or has made it really clear when something happens within these years, so hopefully they'll continue to produce their timelines, but even if they don't, I think they're making it a little easier to follow now and trying to stick a good structure, so you've got the month and the year and one of the reasons I like the months is notice things like that, Fury's Big Week, you know, now you can see how they all are happening right around the same time there, some start a little earlier but the main parts of the movies are all at the same time, Thor: The Dark World, if you remember how it starts right after The Avengers in May, but then the rest of it actually finishes in November of 2013, so after Iron Man 3. And Doctor Strange is interesting because it occurs over almost a year and crosses from 2016 to 2017, so these months, you know they aren't canon, Marvel has established them but they're about as close as anything I've seen and it just helps you visualize things a little better, the last column there is release order and notice that it's got, you know, starting at Iron Man, the first Iron Man, number one and all the way to Multiverse of Madness, number thirty-four. Now, anytime the One-Shots show up, I went ahead and used the same number then with an "a" after it because really like Iron Man 3 is, was released at the same time, then Agent Carter came out on the DVD or the Blu-Ray, so that's why it's 7a, now the reason I think, looking at the release order and release year is interesting, is look at some of these gaps, so Captain Marvel was the 21st released movie, but it's the third movie in order and you know, has a gap of 20 movies between it and then Iron Man and if you look at Black Widow, you know the 27th movie released yet, there it is in between release number 13 and 18, and then, I think Far From Home is interesting because it was released right after Endgame but look at how many things happened before it in the chronology, which again, that's why we were talking about how the Blip is handled so much better, you can see it there, look at all those things that happened before Far From Home when you watch it in chronological order, so it's just interesting to see how different it would be if you watched it in release order instead of the chronological order and then I alluded to it, so let's hit it, those end-credits scenes. For the most part, you can watch the end-credit scene with the movie or TV show and there'll be no issue, there are seven times however when those end-credits scenes are definitely out of order, not all of them matter that much, but I went ahead and for completeness, mentioned them all, Captain America: The First Avenger, the epilogue, even the prologue and the end-credits scene all happened before Avengers so you know you could skip those and just watch the movie itself and the part itself that takes place from 1942 to 1945 and then come back and watch the rest, uh, right before Avengers however if you did watch them all with Captain America: The First Avenger, it wouldn't be the end of the world, it might be a little confusing but it wouldn't be the end of the world, um, then Captain Marvel would be incredibly confusing if you watch its end-credits scene, uh, in chronological order, you need to save that until after you watch Avengers: Infinity War, Incredible Hulk is just a minor thing, the end-credits scene actually is replayed with much more context during the One-Shot The Consultant, so honestly, you can skip the end-credits scene when you watch Incredible Hulk because you'll catch it all during The Consultant, um, Captain America: Civil War, this again is a minor thing but the epilogue actually happens after Black Widow. Black Widow gives us some context into how the epilogue was able to happen, so there's a little head scratching at the time and then you watch Black Widow, and you're like "Oh, I get it!", so not a big deal but worth considering in the realm of big deal however, though would be Black Widow, do not watch Black Widow's end-credits scene until way down to Hawkeye because it definitely is, especially not before Infinity War, you do not want to spoil that so that's one to watch later, I would recommend just before you watch Hawkeye, uh, Thor: Ragnarok, minor point, but its scene technically happens right before Infinity War and then on the other hand, Ant-Man and the Wasp, do not watch that first end-credits scene until after you've watched Infinity War, so just a couple points to consider if you watch it chronologically, it's just the end-credits scenes, but yes, there are some things that you know, you don't want to see until it, until it, you watch it in the right order, so uh, oh, and then the last thing I'll mention is notice that Moon Knight and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness are included in here, we know they happen in 2025, you know, because Moon Knight is listed in the chronological order by Marvel on Disney as happening after Hawkeye and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness of course happened after No Way Home so, no idea what month to even put at this point, but you know what's exciting is this will just continue to grow over time so we'll learn more as it is revealed, so I'll leave this up so you can look it over and digest it more, but mainly I just wanted to say one last time that I really think you would enjoy chronological order and while this maybe just isn't perfect, it's certainly a best attempt at it, it will certainly give you a good viewing order and a good way to tackle this, I watched them all recently and really enjoyed doing it, so I hope you enjoy the Marvel Cinematic Universe, we're living in great times with all these movies and TV shows, thanks for watching, like and subscribe if you'd like more and go Marvel.
Screen cuts to black. End of video.
And that's the chapter. In the next chapter, we will go over the video "Updated MCU Timeline (DS: MoM)".
