The culmination of the Marvel Cinematic Universe is hitting theaters this weekend, and it is set to truly go out with a bang. Based on pre-sales and polling, it seems as though Avengers: Infinity War may very well have a shot at topping the opening weekend record set by Star Wars: The Force Awakens three years ago.

Marvel turned a lot of heads when they dropped the ‘Part 1’ and ‘Part 2’ monikers from their upcoming Avengers titles. This likely came as a result of the negativity surrounding the usage of the two-part releases, which had been used by various novel adaptations such as the Twilight, Hunger Games and Divergent franchises – though Divergent ran out of gas halfway through its two part finale. Ultimately, if Infinity War ends up being a true ‘Part 1’ and not the complete finale that viewers are expecting, it could affect its long term prospects. Still, an opening of over $220 million is all but guaranteed at this point.

Infinity War is targeting the second widest release of all time – only behind Despicable Me 3 last summer. One reason why summer titles can receive such wider releases is thanks to the benefit of drive-in theaters, many of which open around this time of year or sometime in early May. With the 4,470 locations to work with, however, the sky is absolutely the limit. The biggest benefit for it is that it’s riding off the goodwill of a number of Marvel titles that received above average reception; Black Panther was obviously an enourmous success (one that’s virtually guaranteed to have a higher domestic total than Infinity War), while the trio of 2017 titles (Thor: Ragnarok, Spider-Man: Homecoming, and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 were all very well received.

When comparing it to the past Marvel mega-blockbusters, it’s important to not let expectations get out of hand. Captain America: Civil War was all but guaranteed to land above $200 million according to most fans and predictions online, yet landed with ‘only’ $176 million. Similarly, Avengers: Age of Ultron was expected to easily top its predecessors numbers – not land about $10 million behind them. Considering how massively front loaded Infinity War is shaping up to be, it’s going to need a monster Friday in order to land in the range its shaping up for.

Elsewhere at the box office, there’s not much to be seen; A Quiet Place should land in second, though expect it to see its biggest fall to date. Rampage will obviously take a massive hit, while the rest of the top 10 will likely see significant damage. With no other nationwide releases (obviously), the only noteworthy opener is Disobedience, which will be targeting a very limited release, but should post a strong average this weekend.

Predictions

Avengers: Infinity War – $225M A Quiet Place – $13M Rampage – $7M I Feel Pretty – $6.5M Super Troopers 2 – $4.6M