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This isn’t just about legacy or emotional fallout, which the whole of Phase 4 felt like it dealt with. That was to be expected, and even necessary, after all, given the seismic impact of The Blip and its planetary trauma. But the MCU’s lingering fixation on Thanos feels increasingly like a symptom of a larger problem: a failure to move forward. Even in small ways, the franchise keeps pointing back to gauntlet-wielding Mad Titan, because frankly, there’s not been anything else as big or as good to replace him. And with the multiverse careering towards its climax with Avengers: Doomsday and Secret Wars, even Ironheart isn’t free of the curse.
Ironheart’s Thanos Reference Explained

In Ironheart‘s very first episode, a street preacher shouts “Thanos was just the start… and this time Tony Stark won’t save us!” Ignoring the fact that nothing else comes of this apparent prophet of doom with his urgent, apocalyptic warning, his first words are the ones that matter. It’s yet another example of the MCU pulling from the same deck of cards it’s been shuffling since Infinity War. This isn’t just a nod to the past; it’s a reminder that the franchise still sees Thanos as the very definition of existential danger. And while there’s a logic to that – he did, after all, unmake half the universe – leaning on that trauma so heavily risks making everything else feel like a sequel to his saga. And we need to move on.
More importantly, it also drags Ironheart into a gravitational pull it doesn’t need for the sake of an unnecessary reference. Riri Williams should be allowed to establish her own stakes, her own enemies, her own place in the world, rather than a hollow threat of Thanos – or a Thanos-like threat that isn’t part of this story – casting a subtle shadow. Instead, her series opens by invoking the ghosts of Endgame and Stark.









