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Iron Man has some amazing stories under his belt, but the character has never been able to bring his MCU success to the printed page. Marvel seemingly never really knew what to do with the character, either making him a pragmatic superhero, trying to solve problems at any cost, or just copying the MCU. Nothing worked to make the character popular. The hero has been relaunched again, by writer Joshua Williamson and artist Carmen Carnero, and fans are finally getting the character at his best. They did this in the simplest way possible: by embracing the character’s classic conception.
Iron Man (Vol. 7) Is Digging Into the Character’s Past to Find His Future

Being an Iron Man comic fan hasn’t been easy in decades. His best run came in the Bronze Age of comics, and since then, we’ve only gotten a few examples of great Iron Man: Iron Man (Vol. 3), from Kurt Busiek and Sean Chen, “Man in the Iron Mask”, “Extremis”, and the Matt Fraction run. He was crucial to Civil War, but that story made him into a character everyone hated, giving him his pragmatic almost villainous portrayal that would stay his status quo until 2015, when Marvel tried to make him MCU Tony Stark. That failed, and the character has been in the weeds ever since. He still gets books, but they are quickly canned because few people are buying them.
In the 21st century, characters like Captain America, Thor, Wolverine, Daredevil, Spider-Man, and so many others have had numerous best of all time runs and stories and Iron Man hasn’t. Marvel could never find a way to recapture the character’s Silver and Bronze Age success or replicate his MCU success. The last few years have seen Iron Man get cool new armors, but never a cool new series. Well, Williamson and Carnero are changing that.









