chronological order
03 May 2026

The films of the MonsterVerse with Godzilla and King Kong (timeline explained)

The MonsterVerse is what happens when two of cinema's oldest monster myths are rebuilt as one enormous modern legend. 

Kong came first, thundering across the screen in 1933 as RKO's King Kong, a tragic spectacle born from Merian C. Cooper's obsession with scale and Willis O'Brien's pioneering stop-motion effects. Godzilla arrived in 1954, when Toho's Gojira turned atomic trauma into a walking god of judgment, destruction, and radioactive consequence.

They were not created for the same purpose. Kong was beauty, tragedy, colonial fantasy, jungle myth, and man's fatal need to possess the impossible. 

Godzilla was post-war dread, nuclear allegory, and the return of nature as punishment.

Yet the MonsterVerse found the connective tissue between them. It made Kong the last guardian of a vanishing world. It made Godzilla the apex regulator of a planet older and stranger than humanity understands. 

Then it built Monarch around them, a secret organization trying to answer the one question every MonsterVerse story eventually asks: do we control the Titans, fight them, worship them, or learn to live beneath them?

godzilla v kong chronology timeline

This guide explains the MonsterVerse timeline in chronological order, covering GodzillaKong: Skull IslandGodzilla: King of the MonstersGodzilla vs. KongGodzilla x Kong: The New Empire, and the Apple TV series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters. It also explains where Monarch fits, why its 1950s flashbacks matter, how its 2015 and 2017 stories bridge the movies, and which Titans function as the real protagonists and antagonists from a monster-focused point of view.

Quick answer · TL;DREyes only
The chronological MonsterVerse order begins with the 1950s and 1960s flashbacks in Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, then moves to Kong: Skull Island in 1973, the 1999 prologue and 2014 main events of GodzillaMonarch season one in 2015, Monarch season two in 2017, Godzilla: King of the Monsters in 2019, Godzilla vs. Kong around 2024, and Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire around 2027.

The MonsterVerse timeline at a glance

The easiest mistake is to watch the MonsterVerse only by release date and assume the story unfolds that way. It does not. Kong: Skull Island was released after Godzilla, but it takes place decades earlier. Monarch: Legacy of Monsters was released after several films, but its earliest scenes are currently the deepest live-action prequel material in the franchise. The show then keeps returning to the aftermath of G-Day, the 2014 San Francisco disaster that publicly revealed Godzilla and changed the planet overnight.

Chronological placementReleaseStory yearsTitan focusMain Titan antagonist
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters flashbacks2023 to 20261950s to early 1960sGodzilla, early Titan discoveries, Axis MundiThe unknown, militarized fear, unstable Titan portals
Kong: Skull Island20171973Kong as Skull Island's guardianSkullcrawlers, especially the Skull Devil
Godzilla20141999 prologue, 2014 main storyGodzilla as apex predator and balance keeperThe male and female MUTOs
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S12023 to 20242015, one year after G-DayGodzilla's shadow, Monarch secrets, Axis MundiIon Dragon, Frost Vark, portal predators, institutional secrecy
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S220262017, with deeper flashbacksKong, Godzilla, Titan X, Skull Island, Monarch 2.0Titan X, though the finale complicates that label
Godzilla: King of the Monsters20192019Godzilla as alpha, Mothra as allyKing Ghidorah
Godzilla vs. Kong2021Around 2024Kong's search for home, Godzilla's alpha responseMechagodzilla
Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire2024Around 2027Kong's kingship, Godzilla's surface guardianshipSkar King, with Shimo as an enslaved weapon

Before the MonsterVerse: why Kong and Godzilla matter

Kong and Godzilla carry different symbolic baggage into the MonsterVerse. Kong is not simply a big ape. He is cinema's great image of the captured wonder, dragged from an impossible world into a modern one that cannot leave him alone. The 1933 film turns him into spectacle, victim, king, beast, and mirror. T

oho later borrowed him for King Kong vs. Godzilla in 1962 and King Kong Escapes in 1967, letting the American titan crash into Japanese kaiju tradition.

Godzilla is harsher. Ishirō Honda's Gojira came from the shadow of Hiroshima, Nagasaki, nuclear testing, and the fear that technological power had become spiritually monstrous. Godzilla Raids Again followed in 1955, and Mothra vs. Godzilla in 1964 helped cement the Showa era's strange balance of allegory, monster wrestling, and mythic ecology. Across decades, Godzilla changed shape. Villain, antihero, father, savior, destroyer, god. The MonsterVerse inherits all of those versions and streamlines them into one basic idea: Godzilla is not humanity's pet, but he may be Earth's immune system.

Kong standing as the guardian Titan of Skull Island in the MonsterVerse film Kong Skull Island


That is the franchise's big move. It does not treat monsters as random disasters forever. It treats them as ancient organisms tied to planetary systems, radiation, buried ecosystems, old civilizations, and myths humans half-remembered as religion. 

The Titans are not just threats. They are evidence that humanity arrived late to its own planet.

Monarch in the 1950s and 1960s, the secret history before Kong and Godzilla

The earliest live-action MonsterVerse material currently sits inside Monarch: Legacy of Monsters. The Apple TV series gives the franchise something the films only hinted at: institutional memory. Before Monarch becomes the familiar Titan-monitoring agency, it begins as a messy, frightened, ambitious post-war project shaped by soldiers, scientists, and survivors who have seen too much.

The founding trio matters. Keiko Miura, Bill Randa, and Lee Shaw represent three different instincts. Keiko is discovery, the scientist willing to follow evidence into the impossible. Bill is obsession, the man who sees patterns everywhere because the world has shown him that monsters are real. Lee is defense, a military man pulled between duty, loyalty, fear, and wonder. Their early Titan encounters turn Monarch from a theory into an organization.

The show's 1950s thread reframes the old nuclear test imagery that has always surrounded Godzilla. Bikini Atoll is no longer just background radiation in a monster myth. In the MonsterVerse, it becomes one of Monarch's original sins, the moment humanity tries to solve a god-sized mystery with a bomb. That failed instinct never really leaves the franchise. Every later human mistake echoes it: the Oxygen Destroyer, the ORCA, Apex Cybernetics, Mechagodzilla, and the attempts to harness Titan energy without fully understanding what it means.

Monarch also introduces Axis Mundi, a rift space connected to Hollow Earth where time behaves differently. This is not a small lore detail. It explains how Keiko can vanish from the surface world and return decades later with only a fraction of that time experienced from her perspective. It lets the series turn Monarch itself into a family wound. The past is not simply history. It is alive, displaced, waiting below the surface, and able to walk back into the present.

Why this matters — The MonsterVerse films often move quickly from crisis to spectacle. Monarch: Legacy of Monsters slows the mythology down. It shows how Titan knowledge is inherited, buried, distorted, classified, and weaponized. It turns Monarch from a convenient exposition machine into the emotional spine of the franchise.

Kong: Skull Island, 1973, the king before the crown

Kong: Skull Island was released in 2017, but it is set in 1973, near the end of the Vietnam War. That timing is not window dressing. Director Jordan Vogt-Roberts builds the movie like a monster-inflected war film, full of helicopters, napalm, rock music, damaged soldiers, and the bitter absurdity of men wandering into a conflict they do not understand. Skull Island is not a lost theme park. It is a sovereign ecosystem.

The expedition is backed by Monarch, and Bill Randa's presence connects the film directly to the larger MonsterVerse mythology. To the human characters, Skull Island is a discovery. To Kong, the humans are invaders who arrive by air, drop explosives, and disturb a fragile balance. That is why the movie's real moral conflict is not simply people versus monster. It is imperial intrusion versus ecological guardianship.

From a Titan perspective, Kong is the protagonist. He protects the Iwi people, patrols the island, and keeps the Skullcrawlers from overrunning the surface. The Skull Devil, also known as Ramarak, is the immediate kaiju antagonist. Colonel Packard is the human antagonist, not because he is cartoonishly evil, but because he cannot stop seeing Kong through the logic of war. Packard needs an enemy. Kong is defending a home.

The post-credits scene is the franchise's first major mythology expansion. Cave paintings reveal Godzilla, Mothra, Rodan, and King Ghidorah. 

That moment tells the audience that Kong is not alone in a one-off adventure. He is part of a global Titan system, one that stretches from Skull Island to ancient cave art, from buried Hollow Earth routes to the alpha wars still to come.

Godzilla, 1999 and 2014, G-Day and the public age of Titans

Gareth EdwardsGodzilla begins with a prologue in 1999, when the Janjira nuclear plant disaster in Japan marks the first major modern sign that something ancient is waking. The film then jumps to 2014, when the MUTOs emerge and Godzilla finally reveals himself to the world. Later MonsterVerse canon treats the San Francisco disaster as G-Day, the point where monsters stop being classified rumor and become public reality.

Edwards' approach is defined by restraint. Godzilla is glimpsed, withheld, framed through smoke, water, dust, television footage, and human fear. That choice frustrated some viewers who wanted wall-to-wall monster action, but it gives the film a distinct identity within the franchise. This is the MonsterVerse still pretending it might be a disaster film. Humans look up, run, hide, and stare. The Titans are too large for the frame and too old for human categories.

The MUTOs are important because they define Godzilla's role. They are parasitic breeders whose reproduction threatens to destabilize the surface world. Godzilla is not saving humanity because he loves people. He is restoring balance because their existence disrupts the natural order. That distinction is central to the MonsterVerse. Godzilla may appear heroic, but his heroism is ecological, not sentimental.

From a Titan perspective, Godzilla is the protagonist and the MUTO pair are the antagonists. Monarch, represented by Dr. Serizawa and Dr. Graham, understands more than most, but even they are playing catch-up. The military tries to respond with conventional force and nuclear logic, repeating the same old mistake: treating Titans as problems that can be blown away. Godzilla's final victory in San Francisco gives the world a terrifying new truth. Humanity is not at the top of the food chain.

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S1, 2015, the human aftermath of G-Day

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters season one takes place mainly in 2015, one year after Godzilla's battle in San Francisco. This placement is crucial. The show is not an optional side story sitting vaguely around the movies. It is the immediate emotional fallout of Godzilla. The world has learned that Titans are real, but ordinary people still have to live with the wreckage, grief, conspiracy, and institutional silence that follow.

Cate Randa is one of the franchise's most important human witnesses because she is not a scientist chasing wonder or a soldier chasing orders. She is a survivor of G-Day. Her trauma makes the franchise's destruction personal again. Kentaro Randa and May Olowe-Hewitt widen the story into family secrets, stolen identities, hidden files, and the long reach of Monarch. Through them, the series turns the Randa name into a bridge between the 1950s founding era and the shattered post-2014 world.

The show's split timeline is more than a structural trick. In the past, Keiko, Bill, and Lee are building the language of Titan investigation. In the present, their descendants are paying for the secrecy that language produced. Monarch began as an attempt to understand the impossible. By 2015, it has become a maze of secrets, cover-ups, files, facilities, and competing agendas.

Season one also expands the geography of the MonsterVerse. The Frost Vark, Ion Dragon, and other Titan-adjacent threats show that Godzilla and Kong are only the headline gods in a much larger ecosystem. The finale's Axis Mundi material matters most. It proves that Hollow Earth phenomena are not just underground geography. They are tied to unstable portals, altered time, and missing people who can return decades out of place. The season ends by jumping the characters forward two years to 2017, landing them on Skull Island at an Apex facility. That ending creates the runway for season two and pushes the show closer to the larger Kong and Godzilla timeline.

Titan-side reading. Season one does not have a single monster hero in the same clean way the films do. Godzilla is more like a distant force of order. The immediate antagonists are the smaller Titan threats, the portal dangers of Axis Mundi, and the institutional secrecy that has turned Monarch into a family curse.

Monarch S2, 2017, the missing bridge before King of the Monsters

Season two of Monarch: Legacy of Monsters begins where season one leaves off. The modern storyline is set in 2017, two years after the main events of season one and two years before Godzilla: King of the Monsters. This is the timeline correction that matters. The season moves the MonsterVerse closer to the 2019 global Titan awakening, but it should not be treated as a precisely stated eighteen-month countdown. It is a 2017 bridge chapter.

That bridge is rich. The season brings the story back to Skull Island, places Kong in a more active role, confirms Godzilla's continued importance, and introduces Titan X as the new major threat. It also keeps expanding the 1950s and 1960s material, especially around Lee Shaw and Keiko. The result is a season about collisions: young Lee and older Lee, past and present, Monarch science and Apex-style exploitation, Kong's territory and human intrusion, maternal instinct and monster panic.

Titan X is especially interesting because the show initially frames it like a catastrophic new kaiju threat, a sea-linked force that could rival Kong and Godzilla. Yet the season complicates that idea. By the finale, Titan X is not simply a wicked beast. It is a manipulated and wounded creature, tied to offspring, implants, and human interference. That makes it one of the most MonsterVerse-style antagonists possible: dangerous, yes, but also shaped by human arrogance.

Season two also helps explain why Monarch is more ready by the time the world reaches King of the Monsters. The organization has seen Skull Island at close range, dealt with rift science, watched private industry circle Titan power, and learned again that control is usually a fantasy. By the end, the idea of a leaner, more science-focused Monarch feels like a necessary correction. The show moves the agency back toward discovery, away from pure containment.

From a Titan perspective, Kong and Godzilla are the season's great stabilizing forces, though Kong is more central because Skull Island becomes the main stage. Titan X is the operational antagonist, but the final moral reading is more tragic. The larger villain is the same force that has haunted the MonsterVerse from the beginning: human beings trying to force ancient life into military, corporate, or experimental systems.

Godzilla: King of the Monsters, 2019, the Titans become gods

Godzilla: King of the Monsters takes place five years after Godzilla. It is the moment the MonsterVerse stops hiding its kaiju roots and becomes a full mythological opera. Monarch is no longer only tracking one ancient predator and a handful of parasites. It is monitoring a planet full of god-sized beings, many of them remembered in folklore as dragons, demons, protectors, storms, and gods.

Director Michael Dougherty leans hard into Toho reverence. Mothra is treated with religious tenderness. Rodan rises from a volcano like a demon of fire and ash. Ghidorah is staged as a false king, a three-headed storm from outside Earth's natural order. Godzilla becomes more openly regal, less disaster and more deity. This is the film where the franchise's language shifts from MUTOs to Titans, and that change matters. The creatures become part of a mythic hierarchy.

The human story is built around the Russell family and the ORCA, a device that uses Titan bioacoustics to communicate with, influence, and potentially control the creatures. That idea is pure MonsterVerse: a scientific breakthrough that could become salvation or catastrophe depending on who holds it. Emma Russell's eco-radical logic turns Titan awakening into a forced planetary reset. The film understands why that argument is seductive, but it does not fully endorse it. Nature's balance cannot be restored by treating mass death as a button to press.

Ghidorah is the film's key mythological rupture. Unlike Godzilla, Mothra, Rodan, and the other Earthbound Titans, Ghidorah is alien, invasive, and destabilizing. When he becomes alpha, the Titans do not restore balance. They rampage. The planet falls into a hierarchy governed by a false king. That is why Godzilla's victory is not just a fight win. It is a restoration of planetary order.

From a Titan perspective, Godzilla and Mothra are the protagonists. Mothra is not merely Godzilla's helper. She is the franchise's clearest image of benevolent Titan divinity, a creature of protection, sacrifice, and rebirth. Ghidorah is the primary antagonist. Rodan is more fluid, an opportunistic Titan who follows power until the true alpha reasserts dominance. The ending, with other Titans bowing to Godzilla, creates the hierarchy that makes the next crossover possible.

Godzilla vs. Kong, around 2024, the alpha war and the machine monster

Godzilla vs. Kong is set about five years after King of the Monsters, placing it around 2024. By this point, Godzilla is the recognized alpha on the surface, while Kong has been contained on Skull Island inside a managed environment. That arrangement cannot last. Two kings cannot fully exist in the same world while one is kept under glass.

The film has a wonderfully blunt mythic premise: Godzilla and Kong must fight because the world has made them symbols of rival forms of power. Godzilla is ancient nuclear sovereignty, the old god of the surface. Kong is embodied intelligence, tool use, memory, loneliness, and the need for kin. Their clash is marketed as a title fight, but the film's deeper movement is about misdirection. Godzilla is not attacking randomly. He is responding to Apex Cybernetics and the hidden construction of Mechagodzilla.

Hollow Earth becomes the film's major lore expansion. Earlier entries hinted at subterranean Titan routes and deep ecosystems, but Godzilla vs. Kong turns Hollow Earth into a traversable realm with ancestral architecture, energy sources, impossible gravity, and signs of an ancient Kong civilization. Kong does not simply find a cave. He finds a throne room, an axe, and evidence that his species once had history, conflict, culture, and war.

Mechagodzilla is the MonsterVerse's most explicit warning about technological hubris. It is not only a robot duplicate. It is an artificial alpha built from Apex ambition, Hollow Earth energy, and Ghidorah's lingering neural presence. Humanity tries to manufacture its own god, and Ghidorah's ghost slips into the machine. The result is a synthetic abomination that neither Godzilla nor Kong can defeat alone.

From a Titan perspective, Godzilla and Kong are dual protagonists. Their rivalry is real, but it is not the final moral structure of the film. Mechagodzilla is the true antagonist. The Warbats and other Hollow Earth creatures are local dangers. Apex is the human expression of the same old MonsterVerse sin: seeing ancient life as a resource, weapon, or market opportunity.

Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire, around 2027, Kong finds his people

Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire takes place after Godzilla vs. Kong, with many timeline readings placing it roughly three years after Mechagodzilla's defeat. It is the most Titan-forward MonsterVerse film so far. Adam Wingard's second entry pushes the human characters further to the side and lets the monsters carry whole stretches of story through movement, gesture, combat, territory, pain, and expression.

Kong is the emotional center. He is no longer only Skull Island's guardian or Godzilla's rival. He is an exile searching for others like himself. Hollow Earth gives him what Skull Island could not: a living connection to his species. But that discovery is poisoned by Skar King, an ape tyrant who rules through cruelty, enslavement, and fear. If Kong is strength tempered by empathy, Skar King is strength stripped of mercy.

Shimo is the film's most important new Titan because she complicates the idea of the antagonist. She is terrifying, ancient, and powerful enough to change the stakes of the surface world, but she is not the real villain. She is a coerced weapon, controlled by Skar King and forced into violence. Her liberation reinforces one of the franchise's quiet recurring ideas: a Titan's destructive power is not always the same as evil.

Godzilla's role is different but still essential. He is the surface alpha preparing for a threat that could spill upward from Hollow Earth. His power-up through radiation and his clash with Tiamat position him as the planet's emergency response system. Kong's story is personal and political. Godzilla's story is ecological and strategic. They are not brothers in a sentimental sense, but the film turns them into necessary allies.

Mothra's return gives the film its mythic glue. She acts as mediator, spiritual signal, and bridge between Godzilla, Kong, Jia, and the Iwi cosmology. The New Empire is really about succession. Kong becomes more than a survivor. He becomes a liberator and a king. Godzilla remains the surface guardian. The franchise's two central Titans finally have distinct kingdoms: Godzilla above, Kong below, both tied to Earth's balance.

The key themes of the MonsterVerse

1Humanity is late to the planet

The MonsterVerse repeatedly humiliates human certainty. Every institution thinks it has the answer. Monarch wants to study and contain. The military wants to strike. Apex wants to exploit. Eco-terrorists want to trigger renewal through catastrophe. Ordinary governments want control. The Titans prove again and again that human systems are recent, fragile, and badly outmatched by the older life of the planet.

2Godzilla is balance, not obedience

Godzilla is often described as a protector, and that is true in a limited sense. He protects balance. He does not protect human comfort. When he attacks, it is usually because something has disturbed the natural order: the MUTOs breeding, Ghidorah usurping the alpha signal, Apex building Mechagodzilla, or a surface-level threat growing too dangerous. He is not a superhero. He is judgment with dorsal plates.

3Kong is loneliness becoming kingship

Kong's MonsterVerse arc is cleaner and more emotional than Godzilla's. In 1973, he is the orphan guardian of Skull Island. In Godzilla vs. Kong, he is a displaced survivor searching for home. In The New Empire, he finds a people, confronts a tyrant, and becomes a liberating ruler. Kong's story is not about balance in the abstract. It is about belonging.

4Monarch is the argument between science and fear

Monarch is never just a monster-tracking agency. It is the place where the franchise argues with itself. Should Titans be studied, hidden, killed, worshipped, controlled, or left alone? The early Monarch of Keiko, Bill, and Lee forms around wonder and terror. The later Monarch inherits bureaucracy and secrecy. The Apple TV series gives that tension a human face by showing how institutional secrecy damages families across generations.

5The worst monsters are often made by human ambition

The MonsterVerse understands that giant creatures are not automatically the deepest threat. The MUTOs are awakened by nuclear history. Ghidorah becomes a global crisis through human release and manipulation. Mechagodzilla is built by corporate arrogance. Titan X is shaped by interference. Shimo is enslaved. Again and again, human beings turn the unknown into a weapon, then act surprised when the weapon bites back.

Release order versus chronological order

For first-time viewers, release order works well because it preserves the way the mythology unfolded on screen. You begin with the mystery and restraint of Godzilla, jump back to the war-movie weirdness of Kong: Skull Island, then watch the franchise grow into kaiju opera, crossover spectacle, and Titan kingdom myth.

#TitleWhy it matters
01Godzilla (2014)Introduces Monarch, Godzilla, the MUTOs, and G-Day.
02Kong: Skull Island (2017)Introduces Kong and reveals the wider Titan mythology.
03Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019)Brings in Mothra, Rodan, Ghidorah, and the Titan hierarchy.
04Godzilla vs. Kong (2021)Turns Hollow Earth into the main mythological engine.
05Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S1 (2023–24)Explains Monarch's origins and the 2015 aftermath of G-Day.
06Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire (2024)Develops Kong's Hollow Earth destiny and brings Skar King into the mythology.
07Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S2 (2026)Places Skull Island, Kong, Titan X, and Monarch's future in the 2017 gap before King of the Monsters.

Chronological order is better for lore study. Release order is better for newcomers who want the intended escalation. Either way, Monarch: Legacy of Monsters now matters too much to skip. Season one explains why G-Day breaks families as well as cities. Season two shows why the 2017 period between Godzilla's public arrival and the 2019 Titan awakening is not empty space.

Is Peter Jackson's King Kong connected to the MonsterVerse?

No. Peter Jackson's King Kong from 2005 is not connected to the MonsterVerse. It is a standalone Universal Pictures remake of the 1933 original, set in the 1930s and built around tragedy, beauty, lost-world fantasy, and the fatal spectacle of bringing Kong to New York.

The MonsterVerse Kong introduced in Kong: Skull Island is a separate version of the character. He is younger, much larger, and tied directly to Monarch, Skull Island, Hollow Earth, the Iwi, Godzilla, and the broader Titan hierarchy. Jackson's Kong belongs to a different studio, a different timeline, and a different mythology.

What comes next in the MonsterVerse?

The next confirmed film chapter is Godzilla x Kong: Supernova, currently listed for release in 2027. There is also a planned Apple TV prequel centered on a younger Lee Shaw during the Cold War era. Until those stories arrive, the released live-action timeline ends with Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire on the film side and Monarch: Legacy of Monsters season two on the television side.

chronological order
29 April 2026

Thor: Chronological Appearance Order in the MCU - TIME LINE

Thor Odinson crashed into the Marvel Cinematic Universe not as a hero, but as an arrogant, war-mongering prince cast out of the golden realm of Asgard and stripped of his power. His initial journey in Thor is a classic tale of hubris humbled; exiled to Earth, he is forced to learn the worthiness his father, Odin, demanded of him.

This transformation from a brash god to a noble protector establishes his core conflict: the immense power of a thunder god versus the compassionate heart required to wield it justly. As a founding Avenger, he was the team's first bridge to the cosmos, a living myth whose very existence expanded the known universe.

His early struggles were deeply personal, often revolving around the machinations of his brother Loki, whose envy and ambition served as a dark mirror to Thor's own former arrogance. Thor's power was not just in the storms he could summon, but in the struggle to balance his divine heritage with his newfound love for humanity.

thor chronological appearances in the MCU

Thor's long arc is arguably the most tragic in the MCU, defined by a relentless series of losses: his mother, his father, his brother (repeatedly), his home, his people, and his own physical and mental fortitude. His journey is continuously punctuated by ethereal and mystical experiences that shape his destiny:

  • Visions of Ruin (Age of Ultron): A Scarlet Witch-induced vision of a doomed Asgard sends him seeking answers in the prophetic Waters of Sight, granting him a glimpse of the apocalypse to come.
  • Awakening (Thor: Ragnarok): This premonition is fully realized when a spiritual communion with his deceased father on a Norwegian cliffside helps him unlock his true potential, realizing his power was never from the hammer, but from within.
  • Despair and Redemption (Infinity War & Endgame): After failing to stop Thanos, he plummets into a deep depression, a broken god reeling from the weight of his failure. His path through Endgame is one of climbing back from despair, culminating in a poignant time-travel reunion with his mother on the day of her death.
  • Finding Purpose (Thor: Love and Thunder): He completes his journey from king to guardian, finding a new purpose in fatherhood after a quest takes him to the very center of the universe, an abstract, ethereal plane, to face the cosmic entity Eternity.

Thor's Chronological Appearances in the MCU

MCU Appearance Chronological Year of Setting Year of Release Commentary on Appearance
Thor 2011 2011 His debut. The film opens with a prologue set in 965 A.D. detailing the ancient war between Asgardians and Frost Giants. The main story sees a brash Thor stripped of his powers and Mjolnir, then exiled to Earth. It's a journey of him learning humility and becoming worthy of his title.
The Avengers 2012 2012 Thor returns to Earth as a founding Avenger to stop his brother, Loki. He serves as the team's cosmic expert and powerhouse, providing the first major link between Earth and the larger universe. His battle with Hulk on the Helicarrier is a standout moment.
Thor: The Dark World 2013 2013 The film introduces the Convergence, a cosmic alignment causing portals between the Nine Realms to open, creating ethereal, physics-defying battlegrounds. It features the astral funeral of his mother, Frigga, and a prologue of his grandfather Bor's ancient battle against the Dark Elves.
Avengers: Age of Ultron 2015 2015 Scarlet Witch forces a horrifying vision upon Thor, showing him an ethereal, dying Asgard where a corrupted Heimdall accuses him of leading them to ruin. This prompts him to seek out the Water of Sight, a mystical Norn cave, to understand the coming threat of the Infinity Stones.
Doctor Strange
(Mid-Credits Scene)
2017 2016 In a scene that directly leads into Ragnarok, Thor visits the New York Sanctum to ask for Doctor Strange's help in finding Odin. The scene showcases Strange's surreal magic as he teleports a bemused Thor around the room while magically refilling his beer stein.
Thor: Ragnarok 2017 2017 A major turning point. After Odin's death, Thor has a profound spiritual vision where his father's spirit visits him on a cliffside, helping him realize his true power comes from within, not from Mjolnir. This allows him to unlock his full God of Thunder potential in the final battle.
Avengers: Infinity War 2018 2018 His journey is one of cosmic vengeance. After losing his people and brother, he travels to the legendary, dying star of Nidavellir to forge Stormbreaker. The process requires him to withstand the full, raw power of the star's ethereal energy beam, an ultimate test of his durability and will.
Avengers: Endgame 2023 2019 During the Time Heist, Thor travels back to the Asgard of 2013. This results in a deeply emotional reunion with his mother, Frigga, on the very day she is fated to die. Her wisdom gives him the closure he needs to overcome his depression and rejoin the fight, dual-wielding Mjolnir and Stormbreaker.
Thor: Love and Thunder 2025 2022 The film follows Thor's quest for purpose, culminating in a journey to the Gates of Eternity, an ethereal plane at the center of the universe where any wish can be granted. He confronts his own mortality through Jane Foster's battle with cancer, eventually finding new meaning as the adoptive father to Gorr's daughter.
Deadpool & Wolverine
(Cameo)
Indeterminate / TVA Future 2024 While at the Time Variance Authority, Deadpool is shown a glimpse of a potential future (or alternate timeline event) on a monitor. In the repurposed archival footage, a crying Thor is seen mourning over a battered Deadpool, planting a mysterious seed for the MCU's future.
chronological order
26 April 2026

Resident Evil - Chronological Order Guide - Films

Resident Evil Franchise, Complete Chronology

The Complete Survival Horror Timeline: Games & Films

The narrative of Resident Evil unfolds across decades of biological warfare, corporate greed, and human resilience. This guide cleanly separates the three different beasts of the franchise: the Prime Canon (video games and CGI features), the Live-Action Alice Saga, and the Standalone Reboot.

If you want an official tone setter before diving into the lore, PlayStation’s Resident Evil introduction is a fantastic on-ramp. For navigating gameplay order across massive franchises, see our guide on how to play series chronologically.

Chronological order of the Resident Evil games

1. The Prime Canon (Games & CGI Films)

This is the definitive, interconnected timeline. The CGI films and series exist in the exact same continuity as the flagship video games. Society-ending events are heavily engineered over decades, echoing the cataclysm of Emergence Day seen in other sci-fi universes.

Resident Evil 0

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Rebecca Chambers, Billy Coen Core Theme: Corporate Vengeance
In-Universe Timeline: July 23, 1998

Plot and Lore

Set a mere twenty-four hours before the horrors of the initial Spencer Mansion invasion, this narrative follows S.T.A.R.S. Bravo Team’s investigation into the cannibalistic Arklay murders. Rookie medic Rebecca Chambers teams up with fugitive ex-marine Billy Coen. Together they navigate the doomed Ecliptic Express train and uncover a subterranean training facility. The lore reveals the bitter rivalry between Umbrella’s founders. Dr. James Marcus, betrayed and assassinated by his own proteges, returns as a bio-organic leech entity seeking revenge.

This game provides vital context, proving the T-Virus outbreak was not a mere lab accident but a deliberate act of vengeance born from cutthroat corporate backstabbing.

Resident Evil

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Jill Valentine, Chris Redfield Core Theme: Survival Horror Template
In-Universe Timeline: July 24 to July 25, 1998

Plot and Lore

Following the disappearance of Bravo Team, Alpha Team enters the seemingly abandoned Spencer Mansion, only to find an elaborate gothic deathtrap built over a massive buried laboratory. While the shuffling zombies are the headline threat, brutal betrayal is the real infection eating away at the team. Players slowly realize that Umbrella is gathering active field data on their bioweapons, using the elite S.T.A.R.S. unit as high-value test subjects.

The stellar 2002 Remake is universally recognized as the definitive canon reference point, deepening Umbrella’s internal structure and adding the tragic ecological horror subplot of Lisa Trevor.

Resident Evil 3: Nemesis

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Jill Valentine Core Theme: The Outbreak Collapse
In-Universe Timeline: September 28 to October 1, 1998

Plot and Lore

Set immediately before, during, and after the events of Resident Evil 2, this game follows Jill Valentine as she tries to escape an unraveling city. Umbrella is running a ruthless active field test in the chaos utilizing Nemesis. This towering, highly intelligent hunter-killer weapon is programmed with a singular goal to erase all remaining S.T.A.R.S. members to prevent them from testifying.

The zombie outbreak quickly becomes background noise. The real story is a desperate game of cat-and-mouse with a corporation actively cleaning up its witnesses while the city burns to the ground. It turns the sprawling outbreak into a high-octane chase film.

Resident Evil 2

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Leon S. Kennedy, Claire Redfield Core Theme: Intimate Tragedy
In-Universe Timeline: September 29 to September 30, 1998

Plot and Lore

Rookie cop Leon S. Kennedy and college student Claire Redfield arrive in Raccoon City at the absolute worst moment in modern horror history. Separated by a fiery crash, they must independently survive the labyrinthine halls of the Raccoon City Police Department. Their journey forces them down into the city's sewers and eventually into Umbrella’s clandestine NEST facility.

The narrative shifts to the devastating G-Virus story, turning the domestic tragedy of the Birkin family into an extinction-level biological accident. The relentless pursuer pressure from Mr. X teaches players the harsh lesson that safety in safe rooms is temporary. The stellar 2019 Remake established a gritty tone that heavily informs modern franchise lore.

Resident Evil: Code Veronica

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Claire Redfield, Chris Redfield Core Theme: Global Umbrella Empire
In-Universe Timeline: December 1998

Plot and Lore

Claire Redfield's relentless search for her brother Chris drags her into a secretive Umbrella prison on Rockfort Island. The island is ruled by the deeply disturbed Ashford twins, representing the decaying aristocratic legacy of Umbrella's founders. Chris eventually enters the fray mid-crisis, only to discover that Albert Wesker has miraculously returned from the dead.

This entry completely reinvents Albert Wesker from a standard twist-villain into an overarching, long-term threat. Enhanced with a mysterious virus, Wesker possesses terrifying superhuman speed and power, turning viral arms races into the series’ next massive narrative arc.

Resident Evil 4

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Leon S. Kennedy Core Theme: Action Pivot & Mind Control
In-Universe Timeline: Autumn 2004

Plot and Lore

Six years after surviving Raccoon City, a battle-hardened Leon S. Kennedy is dispatched to a remote village in rural Spain to rescue the US President’s kidnapped daughter, Ashley Graham. Instead of zombies, Leon uncovers the Los Illuminados cult and a terrifying ancient parasite known as Las Plagas. Meanwhile, Ada Wong operates in the shadows, running a parallel espionage war to secure a master Plaga sample.

This parasite shifts the fundamental biothreat from a mindless lab virus to a highly intelligent, living hive-mind control system. Widely considered one of gaming’s most successful pivots, it retains a horrific atmosphere but dresses it in high-octane velocity.

Resident Evil: Degeneration

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Leon S. Kennedy, Claire Redfield Director: Makoto Kamiya
In-Universe Timeline: 2005

Plot and Lore

A bio attack detonates in a public airport and the story snaps into crisis logistics. It focuses heavily on containment, evacuation, government messaging, and the dirty overlap between medicine and money. Leon arrives as the already scarred specialist, while Claire arrives as the human cost conscience through her work with the TerraSave NGO.

The plot builds to a familiar shape: a public outbreak above ground and a corporate rot underneath, dealing with the direct fallout of the G-Virus legacy on the black market.

Resident Evil: Infinite Darkness

Type: CGI Series Key Cast: Leon S. Kennedy, Claire Redfield Director: Eiichiro Hasumi
In-Universe Timeline: 2006

Plot and Lore

Leon investigates a White House incident that smells like classified rot, while Claire follows a separate thread that exposes how humanitarian aid can be used as cover for bioweapon politics. The tone leans heavily into conspiracy files, hacking, and black ops.

It exposes the uneasy truth that global institutions learned to weaponize outbreaks the exact same way Umbrella did, just with substantially better PR departments.

Resident Evil 5

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Chris Redfield, Sheva Alomar Core Theme: Blockbuster Bioterror
In-Universe Timeline: March 2009

Plot and Lore

Chris Redfield, now a hardened BSAA captain bearing immense trauma, travels to the sun-baked region of Kijuju in West Africa. Partnered with local agent Sheva Alomar, they uncover TRICELL, a massive corporate successor capitalizing on Umbrella’s old research. The plot escalates wildly as Albert Wesker reveals his endgame: the Uroboros virus, designed to force global genetic evolution.

This entry definitively closes the long-running Chris versus Wesker chapter. The devastating twist of Jill Valentine being mind-controlled and weaponized turns her very identity into a psychological tool for Wesker, culminating in an infamous, bombastic volcano finale.

Resident Evil: Damnation

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Leon S. Kennedy, Ada Wong Director: Makoto Kamiya
In-Universe Timeline: 2011

Plot and Lore

Leon steps into an Eastern European civil war where both sides are flirting with bioweapons because they think it will end the conflict faster. It does not. The film makes the bioweapons black market feel tangible, showcasing outbreaks as military strategy and monsters as political leverage.

Ada Wong appears as the franchise’s eternal shadow operator, always lingering near the viral samples and always intimately connected to the geopolitical lies.

Resident Evil: Vendetta

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Chris Redfield, Leon S. Kennedy, Rebecca Chambers Director: Takanori Tsujimoto
In-Universe Timeline: 2014

Plot and Lore

A new bioterror plan utilizing the A-Virus threatens New York City, but the real story is the psychological state of its legacy heroes. Chris has hardened into a pure military operator, Leon is burned out into a weary cynic drinking heavily, and Rebecca serves as the bridge back to optimism through her scientific expertise.

The villain’s motive is highly personal, keeping the massive urban outbreak from feeling like a random repeat of past disasters.

Resident Evil: Death Island

Type: CGI Film Key Cast: Jill, Chris, Leon, Claire, Rebecca Director: Eiichiro Hasumi
In-Universe Timeline: 2015

Plot and Lore

An outbreak hits San Francisco, and the investigation tightens around Alcatraz Island. The film functions as an all-star team-up. The sheer pleasure is simple: it treats the long-running legacy heroes like a cohesive military unit rather than isolated protagonists.

The villain’s angle is deeply personal because, in a world this far past Raccoon City, nobody is doing bioterror for fun. They are doing it as a reaction to what the bio-wars have already taken from them.

Resident Evil 7: Biohazard

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Ethan Winters Core Theme: The Intimate Horror Reset
In-Universe Timeline: July to August 2017

Plot and Lore

Everyman Ethan Winters travels to a derelict plantation in Dulvey, Louisiana, searching for his missing wife, Mia. He unwittingly walks into a terrifying, mold-infected family tragedy engineered by a synthetic bioweapon child named Eveline. Stripped of the franchise's trademark heavy artillery, the game shifts to a claustrophobic first-person perspective.

The sentient Mutamycete mold and the shadowy crime syndicate known as The Connections become the robust new myth engine. Jack Baker acts as a relentless pursuer, proving that dark, twisted humor and genuine horror can share the exact same heartbeat. It firmly puts vulnerable survival horror back in the driver’s seat.

Resident Evil Village

Type: Video Game Protagonist: Ethan Winters Core Theme: Folklore & Mythological Roots
In-Universe Timeline: February 2021

Plot and Lore

Following a violent raid on his home by Chris Redfield, Ethan Winters is dragged into a snowy, folkloric nightmare in Eastern Europe to save his kidnapped infant daughter, Rose. Here, the mold lineage violently expands into a full-blown religious cult led by Mother Miranda and her four monstrous lords.

The story brilliantly connects the modern horror right back to the oldest Umbrella symbols, revealing that Oswell E. Spencer was originally inspired by Miranda's work. The towering Lady Dimitrescu and her opulent, blood-soaked castle became a massive cultural phenomenon, while Ethan’s heartbreaking final sacrifice provides heroic closure.

Resident Evil Requiem

Type: Video Game Protagonists: Grace Ashcroft, Leon S. Kennedy Core Theme: Returning to the Ruins
In-Universe Timeline: 2026

Plot and Lore

Just released to the world, this highly anticipated entry follows FBI analyst Grace Ashcroft as she investigates a string of bizarre new deaths tied to the condemned Wrenwood Hotel, sitting right on the irradiated outskirts of the Raccoon City ruins. Veteran agent Leon S. Kennedy returns as a second playable lead, officially pulling the series' narrative weight back toward its absolute origin point.

The game presents a chilling new case that treats the crater of Raccoon City and the legacy of the RPD like a genuinely haunted, toxic landmark, refusing to use it merely as cheap nostalgia wallpaper. The dual-protagonist pacing expertly balances Grace's vulnerable survival tension against Leon's lethal competence.

A Chronological Guide to the Resident Evil Films

2. The Live-Action Alice Saga

Six films, one separate continuity, built around Alice (an original character created for the movies). It borrows names and iconography from the games, then drives hard into apocalyptic action, clones, and corporate myth-making.

Resident Evil

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Michelle Rodriguez
In-Universe Timeline: 2002

Plot and Lore

Alice wakes up in a mansion with her memory wiped, which is the first clue that Umbrella treats people like file folders. A tactical unit escorts her to the Hive, a subterranean lab under Raccoon City, where the Red Queen AI has sealed the facility after a T-virus release. The film plays like a pressure cooker: clean corridors, automated defenses, and staff who become the problem they were hired to solve.

It pulls the early franchise grammar perfectly: Umbrella as the corporate villain, enclosed survival spaces, and the signature rhythm of escaping the facility only to realize the facility is everywhere.

Resident Evil: Apocalypse

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Alexander Witt Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Sienna Guillory
In-Universe Timeline: 2002 (Days after previous film)

Plot and Lore

Raccoon City collapses in real time and Umbrella responds like a government inside a company with walls, checkpoints, and a countdown to nuclear sanitization. Alice wakes up infected and enhanced, which quietly shifts the franchise from survival to pursuit. Jill Valentine and Carlos Oliveira pull the movie closer to recognizable franchise skin.

Nemesis is introduced as Umbrella’s walking eraser, a hunter designed to delete witnesses. This is the most overtly game-shaped entry in the Alice saga, heavily leaning on Resident Evil 3’s chase structure.

Resident Evil: Extinction

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Russell Mulcahy Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Ali Larter
In-Universe Timeline: 2007 (5 Years Later)

Plot and Lore

The T-virus has taken the whole planet. The saga becomes a desert convoy story where survivors ration fuel and hope, cities are skeletons, and Umbrella still operates like a parasite that refuses to die. Claire Redfield leads a caravan chasing a rumored safe haven, while Dr. Isaacs embodies Umbrella’s real obsession: replication over cure.

Alice becomes proof that the virus can be turned into power, so Umbrella attempts to turn her into a mass-produced product line via cloning.

Resident Evil: Afterlife

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Wentworth Miller
In-Universe Timeline: 2010 (Months After Extinction)

Plot and Lore

Alice leads a clone raid on Umbrella’s Tokyo HQ, then the film strips her powers and forces her back into human limits. She and Claire chase the Arcadia rumor and end up at a prison full of survivors in the ruins of Los Angeles. Albert Wesker steps into the spotlight as a superhuman corporate warlord.

Chris Redfield enters the movie continuity, and suddenly the films are wearing more game faces than ever, borrowing heavy visual and creature cues from the RE5 era.

Resident Evil: Retribution

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Bingbing Li
In-Universe Timeline: 2012 (Immediate Follow-Up)

Plot and Lore

Alice wakes in a massive underwater Umbrella facility that stages outbreaks like product demonstrations. Whole cities are rebuilt as sets, complete with scripted chaos, because the corporation is literally selling apocalypse as a commodity to foreign powers. Familiar faces return in altered forms through clones and mind control.

Ada Wong and Leon S. Kennedy appear in this continuity, signaling the saga admitting it has become a full franchise mash-up. It raids the action-era toy box, utilizing Jill's chest-mounted mind control device directly from the games.

If you want a quick "what do people even count as canon" temperature check before diving deeper into the lore debates, this newcomers guide on r/residentevil is a useful compass.

Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Type: Live-Action Film Director: Paul W. S. Anderson Key Cast: Milla Jovovich, Iain Glen
In-Universe Timeline: 2017

Plot and Lore

The saga sprints back to the Hive beneath Raccoon City and tries to tie its knots into something that looks like a cohesive plan. Alice is framed as the last piece that can break Umbrella’s machine, utilizing an airborne antivirus cure. It plays like a greatest-hits sprint through betrayal, origin stories, and corporate myth.

The film’s big move is recontextualization. It wants the audience to reread the whole saga through Umbrella’s founding lies and Alice’s manufactured identity, proving that survival is not enough; the ultimate fantasy is dismantling the institution that ruined the world.

resident evil film chronological order

3. The Standalone Reboot

A separate cinematic continuity that aims closer to the early survival-horror vibe of the 90s games, directly adapting major elements of the original PlayStation classics.

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City

Type: Live-Action Reboot Director: Johannes Roberts Key Cast: Kaya Scodelario, Robbie Amell
In-Universe Timeline: September 1998 (Alternate Universe)

Plot and Lore

Raccoon City is already rotting when Claire returns, and the movie treats the town like a company-town ghost story. It features abandoned streets, an underfunded police department, and Umbrella looming over everything like a dying god. The narrative cuts between the Spencer Mansion and the RPD, compressing the events of two classic games into one single night of escalation.

This is the clearest attempt at direct adaptation in live action. It pulls major beats, locations, and names from Resident Evil and Resident Evil 2, then remixes them for film pacing. The core idea is brilliantly simple: if your whole town is built on one corporation, that corporation’s sins become your weather.

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