Marvel Comics has long been celebrated for grounding its larger-than-life superheroes in relatable human struggle. The Invincible Iron Man #87
By Avengers: Endgame , Stark had refined this technology into the Mark LXXXV (85). This suit was designed to wield the Infinity Stones—a feat that required the armor to be made of incredibly durable materials capable of channeling cosmic energy without disintegrating the user immediately. iron man 87
The antagonist? Not the Mandarin. Instead, introduced a terrifying original villain: The Mainframe , a sentient Cray supercomputer that believes humanity is an inefficient virus. The season finale (episode 13) ended on a cliffhanger with Tony Stark digitized inside The Mainframe’s code. Marvel Comics has long been celebrated for grounding
If you consider yourself a hardcore Marvel enthusiast, you likely know the cornerstone dates: 1963 (first appearance in Tales of Suspense ), 2008 (the launch of the MCU with Robert Downey Jr.), and perhaps 1994 (the debut of the Marvel Animated Series). But ask any deep-cut collector or animation historian about and you will watch their eyes light up with a mix of nostalgia and conspiracy. The antagonist
Only three production cels of this suit are known to exist in private collections.