WandaVision: Marvel Easter Eggs Breakdown
A Thorough Breakdown of All the Marvel Easter Eggs on WandaVision
← Use Arrow Keys →
4
WandaVision Episode 4 Easter Eggs
- This episode opens with the heartbreaking reveal that Monica Rambeau was one of the people lost to the Snapture from Infinity War. She returns from Endgame's Reverse-Snap in a hospital where she had been awaiting news after her mother Maria's surgery.
- As Monica is waking up, we hear familiar voices echoing in her head. It's Captain Marvel calling her by her childhood nickname, Lieutenant Trouble.
- As Monica weaves through the chaos of people reappearing in the hospital post-Reverse-Snap, she finally locates someone who recognizes her. Although Maria survived the surgery five years ago, she died from cancer three years ago in real time, having not been blipped with her daughter.
- We finally have some information on S.W.O.R.D.! The acronym stands for Sentient Weapon Observation Response Division, rather than the meaning in Marvel comics, which is Sentient World. It sounds a little more ominous, right?
- Maria's badass legacy continues well past her friendship with Captain Marvel; according to S.WO.R.D.'s acting director, Tyler Hayward, Maria helped build the agency during its inception. She was the acting director until her death.
- Tim gives Monica a mission to help out the FBI in the town of WestView, NJ, where something super freaky is going on with a missing person's case. This confirms that WestView is, indeed, a very real place.
- Welcome back, Jimmy Woo! Monica's FBI contact is none other than Scott Lang's parole officer and semifriend, Agent Jimmy Woo.
- Jimmy reveals that a person in witness protection has somehow dropped off the map in a town that no longer seems to exist where no one recalls anyone who lived there. In an attempt to figure out what's going on, Monica sends in a S.W.O.R.D. drone that vanishes inside the forcefield. It's revealed to have transformed into the retro-style helicopter that Wanda picks up in episode two! We can only assume that since it's an item from the outside world, it gained color when it entered Wanda's reality to show that it doesn't belong.
- Darcy Lewis is back! Now a doctor in astrophysics, Darcy is called to help figure out what's gone wrong with WestView. She's the one who figured out a signal for the broadcast and is the owner of the hand we saw watching Wanda and Vision in episode one.
- The mysterious beekeeper from episode two is revealed to be S.W.O.R.D.'s Agent Franklin, who journeyed through Westview's sewers to investigate. His hazmat suit became a beekeeper's uniform, and the cable around his waist becomes a jump rope as he travels through the tunnels.
- Darcy explains that the sitcom that's become Wanda and Vision's life is literally being broadcast through the signals that S.W.O.R.D.'s viewing, with an audience and everything. There's no explanation for how this is happening, but Darcy and company watched those first three episodes just like we did, credits and all.
- Darcy also points out that Vision is supposed to be dead-dead, which leaves his presence in WestView still unexplained.
- While Darcy and Jimmy can identity a majority of the neighbors we've met in WestView to their real-life counterparts, Dottie and Agnes are the only ones who are missing real information.
- It's revealed that Agent Woo was the voice behind the radio disruption, just as we suspected! But while we can see Wanda and Dottie's reaction to the call, Darcy's broadcast didn't show the same thing. She explains that someone is "censoring" the visuals they're receiving, which means someone knows they're watching.
- Back in the sitcom WestView, we see that Monica's slip-up resulted in Wanda blasting her through the house and the energy field. It's the first time we physically see Wanda using her powers again, so she still has them. But the lapse in her facade has consequences — when Vision returns from his talk with Agnes and Herb outside, Wanda hallucinates him as she last saw him in Infinity War, a corpse with his head crushed in.
- It's important to note that Vision seems to become more aware of the strangeness of their world with each episode. It makes sense because no matter how human he may seem, he's still a synthezoid who has always been able to see beyond the superficial. It harks back to his "birth" in Age of Ultron. He's omnipotent and always learning.
- When Monica lands back in the real world, all she says is, "It's all Wanda." That seemingly serves as an answer to what's going on in WestView, but it's not a whole answer. Wanda seems just as confused and unaware as everyone else, but she is willing to stay in her "perfect" world. The question is, who put Wanda in the position to have her perfect world?