For many fans, the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) peaked with its earlier phases especially The Avengers (2012), Guardians of the Galaxy (2014), Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014), and Iron Man (2008). These films felt fresh, fun, and world-changing. They set a tone: big stakes, strong character arcs, and humour that didn’t undercut tension.
In recent years, though, some viewers feel the MCU has lost that spark. A few main reasons include:
1. Oversaturation of content
There are more movies and now lots of TV shows too. Some argue the universe has been stretched too thin where old films were must-see events, now it feels like there’s something new every few months.
2. Weaker storylines & stakes
Earlier films built towards clear, epic objectives (e.g. stopping Thanos). Lately, critics say stakes feel smaller or stories less compelling. Some plots lean heavily on multiverse chaos and fan service rather than strong narrative logic.
3. Character development feels uneven
The original Avengers had long journeys audiences watched over years. With so many new heroes and spin-offs, critics say many characters don’t get the time to grow in satisfying ways.
4. Different creative vibes
Directors are experimenting, and not every experiment lands. That’s normal in a long franchise — but when Marvel mixes genres (sitcom parody, time travel, meta commentary), it doesn’t always click with all audiences.
However, it’s worth noting:
* Some recent entries do get praise (e.g. Guardians Vol. 3, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever).
* Different fans want different things — humour vs drama, spectacle vs depth.
In short: Some fans think Marvel films have declined because of quantity over quality, less memorable storytelling, and diluted stakes. Others still enjoy the expanding universe. Whether they’re “getting worse” depends a lot on personal taste, but there’s a strong case that the franchise’s best era was its first decade.
Evan Mihail