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Iron Man is known for powerful bleeding-edge tech, but the War Machine armor was different. Rhodey was a soldier, and Stark designed it for a soldier. It was armed with gatling guns, missiles, and other ballistic weapons, as well as the usual repulsors, flight, and super strength. It was the ’90s; big guns were the coolest things imaginable to the 12-year boys who read the comics, bought from grocery stores. On February 8th, 1994, those fans got War Machine #1, the first of many series for the character.
War Machine #1 Is Everything ’90s In One Comic, but It Led to Greater Places

Marvel in the ’90s was interesting, and that’s putting it lightly. The massive success of books like Spider-Man #1, X-Force #1, and X-Men (Vol. 2) #1 led the publisher to go all-in on the style over substance approach, which led to the birth of Image Comics. Suddenly, there was an arms race for who could appeal to the teenage boys buying comics, and one thing that really worked in the ’90s, full of kids who had grown up with Schwarzenegger movies, was big guys with guns.
The comic bubble was starting to burst by 1994, but Marvel was still holding together thanks to short term pops from kids buying shiny covers on the newsstands and spinner racks. War Machine #1 has a silver foil cover on black, a rather striking image that would have sold a lot of young readers and people who thought it would be worth something because it was a shiny number one. The book itself, by Scott Benson, Len Kaminski, and Gabriel Gecko, is ’90s cheese incarnate, with Cable, Deathlok, Nick Fury, and a dream sequence with everyone you can imagine in it. It’s not terrible, but it’s not good. It’s ’90s Marvel. If you were there, you get it.









