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Marvel Chief Creative Officer Joe Quesada at Disney Infinity 2.0 launch at Pacific Theatres Cinerama Dome in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles. Image Credit: Katy Winn/Invision/AP

Buzz Lightyear, meet Captain America.

The Walt Disney Co is adding several Marvel superheros to its toys-meets-games series Disney Infinity. The company announced plans on Wednesday to add more than 20 such characters — beginning with The Avengers members Captain America, Iron Man, Hawkeye, Black Widow, Thor and Hulk — in a new instalment of the franchise.

Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes is set for release this autumn for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Wii U, as well as the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. The new 2.0 version of Infinity will include several updates, including more ways to upgrade characters, new moves and vehicles like motorcycles.

“We wanted to take everything that worked so well and make it epic,” said Jimmy Pitaro, president of Disney Interactive, during an event on Wednesday at Pacific Theatres’ Cinerama Dome in Hollywood.

Marvel comic writer Brian Michael Bendis is writing original stories featuring the Marvel characters for the game.

Infinity utilses real-life toy figures to depict Disney personalities in sprawling virtual lands where those characters can do things like race vehicles, create and play games and construct locales — solo or cooperatively — as well as embark on adventures in their own realms. Each toy figure stores and transmits the character’s history through a reader connected to a game console.

A starter pack for the new version will feature the game, three figures — Iron Man, Thor and Black Widow — an Avengers-themed play set and two discs, which can be used to upgrade or customise characters and lands in the game. Additional figures and discs are sold separately.

The Marvel superheroes will join such Disney characters as Buzz Lightyear from Toy Story, Sorcerer Mickey from Fantasia and Elsa from Frozen.

Infinity executive producer John Vignocchi said backstage after the event that previously released Disney characters will be compatible with the new edition of Infinity, but that newer figures and toy boxes won’t be backward compatible.

“One of the most unique features of Disney Infinity 2.0 on Xbox One and PlayStation 4, just because of the memory footprint of those systems, is that the size of the toy boxes you can create are just gigantic,” said Vignocchi, who added that additional Marvel and Disney characters would be announced at a later date.

A video shown during Wednesday’s event teased such characters as Spider-Man, Loki, Nick Fury and the Winter Soldier in Infinity. Much like the previous instalment, the diverse array of characters will be able to mingle within the game’s toy box mode, meaning it’s possible that the monstrous Hulk could drive Cinderella’s royal coach, or pirate Jack Sparrow could be outfitted with the wings of soaring sidekick Falcon.

Joe Quesada, chief creative officer at Marvel Entertainment, which was acquired by Disney in 2009, said this rendition of the comic book characters are “uniquely Marvel but still fit within the game.”

“We put the Infinity team through the exactly same rigorous torture that we put ourselves through,” Quesada said. “They were really up to the challenge.”

Infinity closely resembles the successful Skylanders franchise from Activision Blizzard. However, Disney’s rendition relies on better-known characters and adds an open-world toy box mode akin to Minecraft, where users’ imaginations can run wild.

Earlier this month, Activision announced plans for an October 5 instalment of its successful Skylanders toys-meets-games franchise called “Trap Team” that allows players to take control of enemies in the game and store them on toy crystals in the real world. Skylanders, which launched in 2011, currently boasts 175 different toy characters.

Pitaro noted on Wednesday that three million copies of the original Infinity starter park have been sold and the franchise has generated $500 million (Dh1.8 billion) in sales since it launched last August.

Disney’ interactive division, which has been responsible for games like the Mickey Mouse console adventure Epic Mickey and the online virtual world Club Penguin, had long been a money-losing unit. Earlier this year, it posted only its third profitable quarter since results began being broken out in 2008, thanks in part to the triumph of Infinity.