The best example is probably the ill-fated relationship between Wanda Maximoff and her synthezoid lover Vision. Their bond perfectly illustrates Vision's own words – "a thing isn't beautiful because it lasts." After Wanda joins the Avengers, the two start a beautiful, if sometimes conflictual, relationship.
While watching Multiverse of Madness it was impossible not to wonder why Vision barely merited a single mention in the film, let alone Wanda's complete indifference to his existence. The grief from losing Vision drove her to imprison a whole town of innocent people in Westview in WandaVision.
In the comics, Wanda and Vision get pregnant through magic — since Vision is a robot, that's seemingly their only option. They have twins named Thomas and William. However, it's eventually revealed that Tommy and Billy were actually created using fragments of the soul of a demon lord named Mephisto.
As of Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Wanda is currently a villain for murdering many of the sorcerers of Kamar-Taj and heroes from other universes, and attempting to steal America Chavez's powers, knowing it would result in the teenager's death.
Wanda was still a formidable adversary, capable of tipping the scales in favor of Ultron (James Spader) or the Avengers, depending on who she was helping. Still, without her Chaos Magic from Marvel Comics, Wanda was not more powerful than Thor or Hulk.
Instead, Wanda is very much the villain of the piece, corrupted by both the use of the dark magics of the Darkhold and by her own mental trauma, anguished by the loss of the sons she had conjured up for herself in the town of Westview, New Jersey—products themselves created by Wanda's further grief over the loss of the ...
Wanda unknowingly uses Mephisto's disassembled soul to magically become pregnant (what with Vision being an android and all) and when Mephisto's soul is reassembled, she loses her twins — hence how the “House of M” storyline comes into being.
She realizes she wants to have children with her husband, Vision, but due to him being a synthezoid, they can not conceive naturally. Instead, she uses her powers, powers that, at the time, she neither fully understood or knew how to control, to create two children: Billy and Tommy, the future Young Avengers.
The Russo brothers, who directed Infinity War and Endgame, once said that Wanda intentionally dropped the accent because she was training to be a spy and the accent would give her away.
Wanda was only interested in getting her kids back, but they were never with Vision, who likely would have been their father as he was in WandaVision. Olsen also revealed to Collider that the decision was made for her character to only seek out a universe where it was just her and her kids.
She develops a romantic relationship with Vision until he dies during the conflict with Thanos. After she is restored to life, Wanda becomes mentally unstable and uses her abilities to trap the entire town of Westview in a false reality she creates to her liking. This brings her into conflict with S.W.O.R.D.
Wanda couldn't make anything. She could only alter reality. Hence, she had to create a separate dimension, out of the real world, just like sorcerers don't create power, they only draw power from other dimensions.
Perhaps the Scarlet Witch's first and truest love, Vision weaves in and out of her life as her former husband, father of her children, confidant, and fellow Avenger. The champion called Wonder Man can also claim Wanda's love, though not to any stable and lasting effect.
When Scarlet Witch first joined the Avengers, she had a bit of a crush on Captain America. That didn't last, as she quickly met and fell deeply in love with The Vision.
1 Their Divorced Happened Because Vision Became An Android
Though he was restored physically, his personality was gone and Simon Williams (who his personality was based off) refused to help restore it again.
The Scarlet Witch is a superhero that's struggled with depression in a realistic way. But rather than let it consume her, she's adopted coping strategies that have helped to change her life.
Over the course of just six episodes of WandaVision, Wanda Maximoff and Vision moved into a new home together; Wanda became pregnant and gave birth to twin boys; the twin boys aged 10 years; the Maximoff family got a dog named Sparky; the dog died; Wanda's brother returned from the dead; and Vision nearly died (again).
It could very well be that his decision to leave was about not wanting to cross paths with Wanda until he'd done this, and once again discovered his worthiness. Even without reconciling his memories and emotions, he would've also regained enough insight to know how powerful Wanda is.
The third installment of WandaVision is titled "In Color," it finds Wanda and Vision living in a '70s-style sitcom as they deal with Scarlet Witch's surprise pregnancy. Of course, this isn't a normal pregnancy, as Wanda goes through an entire nine-month pregnancy cycle in the span of just one day.
Avengers Endgame: Marvel release bonus trailer
As far as fans know, Wanda has not fallen pregnant or lost any children thus far in the film series.
While she aligns with Iron Man for the big Avenger-on-Avenger battle, she's mostly on Team Play Nice, trying to watch out for the boys. Marvel seems to want to put her in a matriarchal role. Avengers: Age of Ultron found her grappling with her infertility as a result of sterilization.
Black fingers are a widely used symbol to represent the fact that a character is evil or has been corrupted by something dark and mystical. It was a design choice to indicate that the Wanda in MoM is different from the Wanda we've seen in the movies before. Wanda has been reading the Darkhold, which is corrupting her.
By manipulating Wanda and feeding into audiences' prejudice, Marvel has all the ingredients to perpetuate an infinite multiverse to prop up its male heroes: Create a woman protagonist that isn't able to fully comprehend her own emotions or powers, exploit her naivety and mental health, manifest her trauma as a ...
Wanda was neither an evil being nor was she the real antagonist. Wanda was only a villain because the Darkhold corrupted her. Compared to the threat of a Sinister Strange in the making, the Scarlet Witch was only grieving on her terms.