Wakanda Forever: TWO Vibranium Meteorites Origin Explained!

431,471
0
Published 2022-11-15
Black Panther Wakanda Forever reveals a SECOND vibranium meteorite created Talokan and Namor… could this have been the Celestial seed of Tiamut from Eternals? Get your hands on your own Geologie regimen now with my 70% discount here & save an additional 30% off the new co-wash when you add it to your trial - geologie.com/NEWROCKSTARS Thank you to Geologie for sponsoring this video.

Where does vibranium come from in the MCU? Was it sent to Earth by Celestials? Erik Voss looks deeper into Black Panther Wakanda Forever and its parallels to Eternals to explain how vibranium is very likely linked to the origin of Celestials, and how a sympathetic cosmic entity could have blessed Earth with vibranium as a defense mechanism!


Check out our sweet, sweet merch! www.newrockstarsmerch.com
Subscribe:​ ​bit.ly/SubNewRockstars​ | Enable ALL push notifications ​ 🔔

Follow New Rockstars​:
Instagram: ​instagram.com/newrockstars
Facebook: ​facebook.com/newmediarockstars
Twitter: ​twitter.com/newrockstars
Patreon: ​patreon.com/newrockstars

About New Rockstars:
Hey everyone, welcome to the official New Rockstars YouTube channel! We got you covered with our in-depth analysis of every movie and television show you love! Don’t forget to subscribe and enable all push notifications so you never miss a podcast, breakdown, or theory.

PATREON PRODUCERS:
Comically Inclined Studios
Ladmia
LookNoHands
Karen Wang
Rick Denmon
RXJedi

Written by Erik Voss
Producer: Erik Voss www.twitter.com/eavoss
Producer: Zach Huddleston
Producer: Brandon Barrick
Post Production Supervisor: Riley Auskelis
Staff Editors: Drew Coombs, Joshua Steven Hurd
Editors: Aaron Carrion
Camera Operator: Dashiell Hamingso

All Comments (21)
  • @ZevockVile
    What if the vibranium that fell to earth wasn’t sent by a celestial but were the remnants of a dead celestial, like Knowhere’s body.
  • I thought it was just one meteorite that split up upon impact. One piece hit in the ocean and the other in wakanda. Maybe the eternals actually hit it prior to entering impact to prevent it from wiping out life?
  • @lucas_501
    its really common for large meteorites to split into smaller ones when entering the atmosphere, they can end up falling pretty far away from each other
  • Given they confirm WF takes place after Eternals it woulda been cool to see Namor and Talokan react to Tiamuts body in the Ocean
  • If vibranium came from an asteroid, that means there is a solid chance that other planets have vibranium just as commonly as we have iron ore. I wonder if Captain Marvel or the Guardians might have seen it outside of earth
  • I like the idea that this rare element in the universe might be somehow connected to Celestials in a way that they are able to draw it to them as they gestate within whatever planet they exist in. Maybe it's less the Celestial "armor" and more the fiber of their physical form. In Eternals, Arishem was depected as almost coming apart or fraying in a way. Now that could be a reflection of the Celestials immense size that those pieces aren't an indication that he's coming apart, he's just enormous but it could alternatively be that as he ages through the eons, gestating Celestials throughout the universe are tugging at his physical being and thats where the vibranium is coming from: it could be flecks of him.
  • @geospecies
    Can't wait for the introduction of Adamantium and its explanation
  • @nikduke23
    So, that moment when you Ulysses Klaue stated that people "thought Wakanda and vibranium were somewhere in South America (El Dorado) but it was it Africa the whole time". Coogler played that whole concept very strategically. 👏🏾
  • @DJElixir
    vibranium: " The strongest material in the universe!" Uru: Hold my Beer
  • @JeyakumaarMS
    It might as well, be part of the Eternal's body. We do see chunks missing from Arishem body. It could be Vibranium ore too, which broke on its way to earth and fell in multiple places, two of them we know of.
  • @PS-mj8hl
    In the real world Meteors often break into several pieces before impact with the planet. Is it possible that this meteor could have Broken in two before striking the planet with one piece landing in Wakanda and another landing in the Yucatán?
  • @proffxxl
    What if the vibranium was like a shell around the seed to protect it as it traveled to Earth, then splits in half to open and let the seed be planted into the planet. Then the vibranium just crashes to the surface. Maybe it doesn't usually happen that way and it usually splits high enough up that they miss the planet but Earth gravity caught these 2 pieces, and that is why it is rare in the rest of the universe.
  • There was no mention of Tiamut in Wakanda Forever. Namor and the Talokans should've greatly affected by that since Tiamut appeared in the ocean.
  • @Valpak223
    That last quip is what I was thinking. What if the vibranium was meant to celestial armor, which is why Cersei had trouble turning Tiamut into stone, because it’s vibranium
  • @mariemoore518
    You guys come up with the most interesting theories! I love the deep dives into Marvel canon
  • @djwaglmuffin
    The vibrainium (meteor) is NOT the interesting part about this. The interesting part is a "god" reached out to someone about the vibranium which I'm now wondering if it was Kang who guided them to the plant.
  • Maybe the two meteorites are pieces of a Celestial that was blown up (Celestial vs. Celestial battle?). These meteorites might contain both armoured elements (vibranium) but also organic/life-giving components (that influence life; mutants, the heart-shaped herb, etc.). Guardians of the Galaxy established Nowhere and the fact that Celestial “corpses” were harvested of resources.