Iron Man

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This article is about the cool exec with a heart of steel. For the Autobot buried under England, see Man of Iron.
Iron Man is a human from the Generation 1 continuity family and the Marvel portion of the Crossovers franchise.
Skywarp realizes pushing Iron Man down a flight of stairs requires a flight of stairs.

Iron Man, aka Anthony Edward Stark, appears to be the most sensible member of his species. While a normal, squishy human would be content to walk around vulnerable to attack, he has taken the surprisingly logical step of encasing himself in a metal suit carrying advanced weapons like a proper being.

He is not G.B. Blackrock.

Fiction

IDW Generation 1 comics

For some time, Iron Man had been investigating rumors of giant alien robots secretly living among humans, and constructed a giant armored suit just in case. His suspicions were confirmed during the Decepticon attack on Latveria, and he took his giant suit to join the other Avengers who were investigating the situation. On the way, he was contacted by Captain America to make sure that Ratchet's Psycho-Prism-repressing devices were safe for humans. Iron Man arrived in Latveria just in time to join the Avengers and their new Autobot allies in the fight against several super-powered Decepticons. Man and Machine, Part Two While the giant suit was effective in the face of the alien robots, it proved quite the energy guzzler, nearly expending all its reserves during the battle. The Autobots helped Iron Man out by offering their own energy, supercharging his armor to dangerous levels. Man and Machine, Part Three

When Megatron, leader of the Decepticons, arrived on the scene, Iron Man challenged him personally... and was quickly dispatched. Overloaded with energy, his anti-Transformer suit was finished off when Megatron severed its head with his fusion cannon. Fortunately, Iron Man himself was controlling the mech from inside its chest, and came out unharmed to continue the battle using his regular suit. Eventually, the Decepticons were vanquished and the situation in Latveria was resolved. As Iron Man returned home aboard the Quinjet, he was already making plans for an even larger suit... Man and Machine, Part Four

Marvel Crossovers toy bios

Working with Mister Fantastic, Iron Man used alien technology to build transforming battle suits for the most marketable of Earth's heroes. Being a control freak, the one he built for himself has an override system allowing him to take control of the rest.[1]

Later, Iron Man painted his battle suit black in order to disguise it as a regular fighter jet and lull his enemy, Doctor Doom, into a false sense of security.[2] At some point, he built himself a new suit, along with one for Spider-Man. These two mechs had the ability to combine with each other.[3] After realizing that there are times when speed on the ground is more useful than flying, he constructed another mech, this time shaped like a sports car. It's just as fast as the jets, though.[4]

Toys

Crossovers

Unfortunately, no booze bottle accessory.
  • Iron Man (Marvel, 2008/2009)
    • Accessories: Two missiles
The Marvel Crossovers Iron Man transforms into a fighter jet of madeup-make, bearing more than a passing resemblance to an F-22 Raptor with a stubby nose cone and large/stretched wings, under-slung with non-firing missiles. Each wing is also equipped with a spring-loaded missile launcher, which can be mounted on the undersides of his robot-mode forearms.
This mold was later redecoed in gray and black. Note that the toy pictures on the packaging have a different color scheme than the actual toy.


Surprise! I'm the same guy.
  • Iron Man (Marvel, 2009)
    • Accessories: Two missiles
A black and gray redeco of the previous Iron Man toy resembling Iron Man Armor Model 11 or War Machine.


When the "Iron Spider" costume wasn't enough.
  • Spider-Man / Iron-Man (Marvel two-pack, 2009)
    • Accessories: Two missiles
This Iron Man toy transforms into a "flying wing" style stealth bomber with two firing missiles under its wings. He comes packaged with Spider-Man (who transforms into a helicopter), and can combine with him in either mode to form a "giant super bomber" or a robot mode that mostly just looks like Spider-Man wearing an Iron Man plane hat.
This mold was also used to make War Machine in the "Iron Man 2 Concept Series" (see below) and later redecoed again into a glow in the dark partial homage to the crimson dynamo.


  • Iron Man (Marvel, 2010)
Iron Man transforms into a sports car. He features two flip-down non-firing blasters in his shoulders.


  • Iron Man (Marvel, 2010)
    • Accessories: Two missiles
To tie in with the release of Iron Man 2, this entire Crossovers assortment is part of the "Iron Man 2 Concept Series", featuring Iron Man and War Machine toys. One of these is a redeco of the original jet mold with the gray parts replaced by more red and yellow.


  • Iron Man (Marvel, 2010)
Another toy in the Concept Series, this one is a slight redeco of the Iron Man sports car mold. Changes include darker red and gray plastic and paint for his rear lights.


Seeing red yet?
  • Iron Man (Marvel, 2010)
    • Accessories: Gun
The only new (well, new for Iron Man) mold in the Concept Series is a retool of the Crossovers Captain America toy, transforming into a Humvee. He has a newly molded head and is armed with a large gun that mounts on his roof in vehicle mode. This gun and its attachment point were originally designed for the canceled Punisher toy.
  • Iron Man (Marvel, 2010)
    • Accessories: Two missiles
This Iron Man toy transforms into a "flying wing" style stealth bomber with two firing missiles under its wings, the redeco features silver accents with glow in the dark paint apps outlining large red stars on it.


  • Iron Man / War Machine (Marvel two-pack)
Iron Man (Light-tricycle) and War Machine (SWAT vehicle) combine into a Super Bomber.
Your bargaining posture is highly dubious.
Your bargaining posture is highly dubious.

Proceed on your way to oblivion.
This item has been canceled, with no current plans for release.


Notes

Early stock photo of the redeco Iron Man.
  • Reprints of Iron Man stories were run as a back-up strip in early issues of the Marvel UK Transformers comics. Further reprints featuring the present day Iron Man appeared in issues #126-129 and #146-152. The Iron Man of 2020 also appeared in a crossover with Spider-Man reprinted in issues #119-125.
  • Early stock photos gave the original Iron Man toy's redeco a different color scheme, one that resembled Iron Man Armor Model 01 and featured silverish gold in place of the black parts.
  • Iron Man is voiced by David Kaye in the cartoon Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes as a guest character and the video game Marvel Nemesis: Rise of the Imperfects. Voice acting is a small world. Yeesss.

References

  1. Iron Man's Crossovers toy bio
  2. Black Iron Man's Crossovers toy bio
  3. Spider-Man/Iron Man's Crossovers toy bio
  4. Sports car Iron Man's Crossovers toy bio