The idea of Iron Man's life being in danger is certainly not new, and the same goes for Tony being overwhelmed by guilt over something. After surviving that, Tony goes to an AA meeting and then mysteriously wakes up in a bar's restroom, inexplicably drunk and with people nearby ready to film him throwing up in the streets. This forces Tony to move to a warehouse in Jersey City, where he is attacked by a mysterious man in an armored suit. Somehow, Tony, who was standing right next to the exploding reactor (without his armor), only gets minor injuries, while an old lady who lived next door is killed. ![]() His basement's energy reactor overheats and the entire building explodes. However, he becomes the target of an assassination attempt. After spending all of his fortune to buy a huge arsenal of weapons of mass destruction to dismantle it, Tony apparently just wants to be left alone and work on his new armor, Mark 70. In The Invincible Iron Man #1, by Gerry Duggan, Juan Frigeri, and Brian Valenza, Tony is lying low in his only remaining house, a "modest" building in New York. Related: She-Hulk Exposes Tony Stark's Biggest Flaw Instead, Tony is immediately thrown into another crisis that follows very similar patterns. After recovering from that, one would expect Duggan's Iron Man to be allowed to catch his breath. Cantwell's Iron Man began with Tony leaving Stark Unlimited and getting rid of most of his assets, before going back into addiction (this time to morphine) and then stepping into a full-scale god trip thanks to the Power Cosmic. Inevitably, the company always goes back to the same kind of story, which sees Tony's "fall from grace" and his slow climb back to the top. ![]() Marvel Comics has struggled to find a good formula for Iron Man for years, especially under the pressure of the popularity of the character in the MCU.
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