
Sersi
First Appearance
Venus #1 (1948)
Powers & Abilities
Teams
Also Known As
Circe, Mesmer, Sorceress, Sylvia Sersi
About Sersi
Sersi is one of Marvel's most powerful and ancient beings, a member of the near-immortal Eternals — a race of super-humans created through cosmic experimentation by the enigmatic Celestials. With a power set that staggers the imagination, Sersi can manipulate matter at the molecular level, reshape reality around her, and has lived long enough to walk through the myths and legends of human civilization itself. She has gone by many names across the millennia, including Circe, the enchantress of Greek mythology, a connection that gives her one of the most fascinating backstories in the Marvel Universe and ties her directly to humanity's oldest stories.
From a collector standpoint, Sersi carries one of the most surprising and coveted first appearances in Bronze Age comics — Venus #1 from 1948, a book that predates the Marvel Age entirely and stands as a genuine Golden Age rarity. While her modern characterization was refined and expanded by Jack Kirby during his landmark Eternals run in the 1970s, that early appearance makes her key issues a treasure hunt for serious collectors. Her prominence grew significantly when she joined the Avengers in the early 1990s, serving as an active member during a memorable era of the team and forming a controversial psychic bond known as the Gann Josin with the Black Knight — a storyline that gave her real emotional depth and dramatic stakes.
Sersi has been central to some of Marvel's most ambitious cosmic storytelling. The original Eternals series by Jack Kirby remains one of the most visually inventive and philosophically bold runs in Marvel history, and Sersi is one of its crown jewels. Neil Gaiman's celebrated Eternals limited series reintroduced the character to a new generation, and the subsequent volumes and tie-ins have only expanded her mythos. Her involvement with the God Squad further connects her to Marvel's vast pantheon of divine beings, placing her at the intersection of cosmic and mythological storytelling that collectors find endlessly compelling.
For collectors, Sersi represents a rare combination — a character with Golden Age roots, Bronze Age reinvention, and modern relevance. Her key books span decades and genres, from scarce pre-Marvel Atlas-era comics to landmark Kirby originals to modern variant-heavy limited series. Whether you're hunting a raw copy of that first Eternals issue, chasing down her Avengers era appearances, or completing a run of the Gaiman series, Sersi's bibliography rewards dedicated collectors at every level of the hobby.







