I watched my feed fill with short clips, character portraits, and roster dumps and felt the room tilt. The leaks are a stain of ink across the internet, impossible to ignore. If you follow mobile games or Marvel IP, you’ve probably already tripped over at least one spoiler.
My notifications blew up this morning — what the leaked footage actually shows
You’ll see on-screen mobile prompts, portrait art, and short gameplay clips that read like a work-in-progress demo. The build floating around includes mobile button overlays and abilities mapped for touch, confirming this is being tuned for phones first. Trusted leakers such as @multiversusie and @X0X_LEAK on X (formerly Twitter) have been posting model renders and video clips that match each other, so the signal has weight.
What is Project Comet?
Project Comet is the working name for Marvel’s next free-to-play action RPG with gacha mechanics, in development at Scopely — the studio behind titles you already know on mobile: Pokémon Go (Niantic partnership history), MONOPOLY GO!, and Marvel Strike Force. Early footage suggests the game borrows currency systems and summoning loops used in hits such as Genshin Impact and Wuthering Waves, while leaning into Marvel’s cinematic-level character work.
The leak thread kept growing in the feed — here’s the roster that surfaced
I clicked through a long data-mine dump and counted familiar names. The current build lists playable characters and a separate set marked as ‘upcoming’ in the files.
- Playable Characters: Wolverine, Doctor Strange, Captain America, Doctor Octopus, Invisible Woman, Elektra, Spider-Man, War Machine
- Upcoming Playables: Juggernaut, Black Widow, Beast, Hulk, Jean Grey, Scarlet Witch, Thor
That inclusion of villainous figures such as Doctor Octopus and Silver Samurai is notable—Marvel Rivals largely avoided antagonists as playable options. The data also contains art assets, ability icons, and what appears to be rarity tiers, which is standard gacha scaffolding.
Will Project Comet be free-to-play?
Yes: files and monetization hooks in the build point to a free-to-play model with gacha pulls and in-app purchase bundles. Expect price tiers similar to other mobile ARPGs—small packs at around $4.99 (€5) and larger multi-pulls near $19.99 (€18). Scopely’s history with live-ops and event-driven revenue makes aggressive cadence likely once the game launches.
A leak thread on X felt like a bulletin board — why that matters for you
When a prolific leaker posts models and footage, the community reacts fast. That reaction shapes early expectations and can force developers to answer for balance or narrative choices before an official reveal. You and I both know public perception now becomes part of the product lifecycle; Scopely will have to manage both PR and legal clearance while the build remains in test.
The studio’s track record sat at the back of my mind — what Scopely brings to the table
You’ve seen Scopely’s logos on game launch screens and promotional banners. They operate on a live-ops machine that grows games through timed events, character banners, and partnerships. That expertise explains why Marvel is comfortable experimenting with a gacha ARPG under their license: Scopely monetizes IP reliably, and Marvel has been expanding its games portfolio aggressively.
Community reaction in the thread — how players are interpreting the leaks
Reading replies on X showed a split: collectors salivating over roster breadth, while core action-RPG players questioned touch controls and depth. Data miners are already pointing out potential balance issues and synergy possibilities between heroes and villains. The leak frenzy can be a double-edged sword: it builds hype, but also sets expectations that the finished game may not meet.
So what does this mean for the market and Marvel’s strategy?
Marvel is treating its IP like a platform for recurring revenue across formats. If Project Comet goes live with banner systems and event rotations, it will join a crowded mobile ARPG gacha market and compete with giants and niche titles alike. For players, the game could act as a collector’s magnet; for Marvel and Scopely, it’s another long-term revenue stream calibrated by live-ops calendars and influencer outreach. The gacha economy here is a coin-operated carnival, built to spin attention into purchases.
I’ve been following game leaks, industry moves, and developer patterns long enough to read the signs. The roster, the mobile UI, the live-ops fingerprints—those are the clues you and I can use to predict the next moves. Will the final release polish what’s in the leaks, or will it change course under pressure from fans and internal testing?
I’m the JUGGERNAUT https://t.co/Fgo9uB5YYF pic.twitter.com/aljOgQVUx3
— MultiverSusie (@multiversusie) June 19, 2026
What I want you to take away is simple: leaks accelerate narrative and squeeze developers. If you care about roster reveals, balance, or pay structures, follow leakers responsibly and watch Scopely’s channels for official updates. Expect frequent event rotations, character banners, and cross-promotion with other Marvel titles.
Are you watching Project Comet for the roster, the gameplay loop, or the money model?