You are cordially invited to the wedding of Anthony Edward Stark and Emma Grace Frost...Come join the lucky couple as they exchange vows. Attire is Hellfire formal. Orchis raid to follow. Plus some exclusive wedding extras!
Rated T+
This issue was perfection! I tried to find a single flaw or nitpick and I came up wanting. With some solid twists and turns, familiar characters, and incredible art, this team is firing on all cylinders. While I am predisposed to enjoy any title with Iron Man at the center, I can say without a doubt that you will be hard pressed to find a more enjoyable single issue of any comic. I know that I have been saying this before, but if you are not already reading this please don't wait, start now! Read Full Review
Desperate situations call for unlikely partnerships and desecrating sacred institutions in Invincible Iron Man #10. Read Full Review
Frigeri delivers some beautifully detailed and creative art throughout the issue. The visuals are exciting and compelling throughout. Read Full Review
If you like surprises, you'll probably love Invincible Iron Man #10. It plays out the wedding in a way you won't see coming. Sure, the teasers and cover are misleading, but that's comics, so sit back and enjoy a team-up that somehow works even when the characters are like oil and water. Read Full Review
The tension created here is palpable and if we know this creative team, things are about to get real explosive, real fast. Read Full Review
Invincible Iron Man #10 presents the much-advertised wedding between Tony and Emma in a story that extends their covert operation into new and somewhat amusing directions. The wedding is contrived as heck, but it makes sense for the story Duggan's telling, and surprisingly, Emma and Tony make for an interesting couple. Marvel made a bigger deal out of the wedding than it deserves, but the story has potential for what Emma and Tony can do together. Read Full Review
Gerry Duggan and Juan Frigeri deliver on answering the "Why? question around Tony Stark and Emma Frost sudden marriage. Invincible Iron Man #10 embraces how forced the marriage is to elevate the roles Tony and Emma are playing moving forward. Which in turn leads this issue to achieve the goal of the marketing around this X-Men and Iron Man crossover story within the greater Fall of X storyline. Read Full Review
I like a lot the chemistry between Emma and Tony.
This issue was so much fun, art was great, some FANTASTIC moments across the board with all the characters.
Gerry Duggan knocked this out of the park, I hope the rest of the series continues with this energy.
I liked this significantly more than Duggan's X-Men issue this month. That issue wasn't bad by any means, but I felt more interested by what was going on here. That's possibly because Duggan's X-related stuff is present here, but he also has the more Tony-focused stuff that we've been getting in the previous nine issues. I think he balanced that well in the previous issue and again in this one. I know this series will continue to be listed under the Fall of X titles for the next few issues, at least, so I hope that Duggan is able to maintain this balance.
I only picked up this book to find out about the wedding. It was a decent issue. I wasn't too happy with the X-men lead-up, but this one was a bit more fleshed out. I liked the manipulation and the revealing of the metal.
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Convoluted as hell, but kinda entertaining. Still not into this Stark mutant war thing.
The more Marvel has revealed about the wedding between Tony and Emma, the more I’ve come around to it. Gerry Duggan completely leans into the sham that their nuptials are in this issue, with the two ending up in Las Vegas of all place to exchange vows. One of the better bait and switches Marvel has pulled on readers after initially teasing this as a monumental event. Aside from that, this issue’s plot didn’t exactly pass the smell test. Feilong showing up to their shotgun Vegas wedding as some sort of power move? I didn’t buy it. Sure he’s presented multiple examples of toxic masculinity to humiliate Tony, but he’s always done so in an extremely calculated and planned out way. I also don’t recall Emma every previously owning amore
Emma is Duggan's Mary Sue. She must appear in every issue he writes.