IRON MAN HAS BECOME THE IRON GOD!
Only trouble is Korvac has once again become cosmic as well. Their conflict now spills out across the universe as both newly nigh-invincible entities vie for absolute dominance. What does it look like when two massive egos with celestial-sized abilities duke it out? What kind of havoc does it cause as they tear through galaxies and dimensions? And how can a handful of tiny humans stop them in hope of saving their old friend Tony Stark?
RATED T+
Christopher Cantwell, Cafu, and company are truly making some of the best Marvel work that exists right now, and this issue only proves that in spades. Read Full Review
This book is perfect, plain and simple. From the writing, to the art, to the final page that sets up an exciting ride to come, this issue is a huge win. Read Full Review
Iron Man #15 has elevated this series to unbelievable levels. Cantwells storytelling excels over a long period of time. With fifteen issues, the true trajectory of the plot is awe-inspiring. Stark has been ripped apart, defeated, broken, reborn, and ascended all in one cacophonic arc. And all against a villain that seemed impossible to defeat. And the phenomenal art team has created a visual epic. Read Full Review
Roberson delivers some exceptional art in this issue. The story is broad and big and the art perfectly brings those moments to life visually. Read Full Review
Korvac vs Iron God in a battle to save the universe is something I didn’t know I needed in my life.
It seems Tony has made a new nemesis with Korvac. Hopefully we see him again since he’s shot up to being one of the best Iron Man villains
And still the craziest thing about this issue was the Living Tribunal and other Gods actually doing their job
Man this series has exceeded all expectations. This is an Iron Man story I want to read and to see. Epic, beyond any sense of scale and still human at its core.
Fucking great.
I liked this one. Cantwell took a break from the self-pity party and the visuals were stunning. I was skeptical of this issue without Cafu on art but Robinson did a great job here. The writing was ok, too.
Despite the cosmic scale (nicely expressed in the art), this boils down to a mark-one comic book good vs. evil fight, with the usual outcome and the usual hyperbolic language. The "sole survivor" frame story isn't novel, but it's executed decently, and it adds a much-needed touch of narrative complexity.
I basically take this chapter as an unavoidable necessity, a tendon linking the Korvac story to the upcoming "Iron God" story. It's pretty good, but it's not special.
It's good enough to be pretty solid. I like the theme, the art was pretty solid, it just lacked some of the emption it was trying to convey.