Iron Man's armor#List of armors

{{Short description|Fictional exoskeleton worn by Iron Man}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2023}}

{{For|the armors' depiction in the Marvel Cinematic Universe|Iron Man's armor (Marvel Cinematic Universe)}}

{{Primary sources|date=April 2023}}

{{Infobox comics elements

|image = Iron Man's armors.jpg

|caption = Variations of Iron Man's armors, art by Bob Layton

|publisher = Marvel Comics

|debut =Tales of Suspense #39 (March 1963)

|creators = Don Heck
Jack Kirby
Steve DitkoA Steve Ditko Costume Is Identifiable By a Single Glove or Boot cbr.com

https://www.cbr.com › CBR ExclusivesSteve Ditko Was More Than Just the Guy Behind Spider-Man Wired

https://www.wired.com › Culture › comics steve ditko created the original iron man costume? from www.wired.com

July 9, 2018 —

|scifiweap = y

|supports = Iron Man, The Avengers

|subcat = Marvel Comics

|sortkey = Iron Man's Armor

}}

Iron Man's armor is a fictional powered exoskeleton appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. It is built and worn by billionaire Tony Stark when he assumes the identity of the superhero Iron Man. The first armor was created in-story by Stark and Ho Yinsen, and was designed by artist Jack Kirby, first appearing in Tales of Suspense #39 (March 1963).

In the fictional multiverse, the appearance of Stark's armor has changed over the years. Stark has modified or optimized the armor to adapt to specific situations. As various artists have depicted Iron Man and his armor, its appearance has changed over time.

Overview

Stark's suits are each unique in design and purpose. They are made of incredibly strong, fictional materials bolstered by a force field. Every suit has a self-contained environment, assorted onboard weapons systems, enhanced strength, thruster-aided flight, and various communications arrays and sensors, such as radar and radio.{{cite book |last1=Bray |first1=Adam |last2=Cink |first2=Lorraine |last3=Scott |first3=Melanie |last4=Wiacek |first4=Stephen |title=Ultimate Marvel |date=2017 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=9781465495372 |pages=229–230 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OSTdDwAAQBAJ&dq=%22iron+man%27s+armor%22&pg=PA229 |access-date=August 15, 2020}}

Creation

While Tony Stark himself was designed by Don Heck, the designer of the character's first gray suit of armor in 1963 was Jack Kirby.{{cite book|last = Daniels|first = Les|author-link = Les Daniels|title = Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics|publisher = Harry N. Abrams|year = 1991|location= New York City|page = 99|isbn = 9780810938212}} It was recolored gold for the character's initial batch of adventures in Tales of Suspense,{{cite book |last1=Patton |first1=Brian |title=The Ages of Iron Man: Essays on the Armored Avenger in Changing Times |date=2015 |publisher=McFarland & Co |isbn=9781476620749 |editor1-last=Darowski |editor1-first=Joseph J. |page=15 |chapter=The Iron Clad American: Iron Man in the 1960s |access-date=August 15, 2020 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x3gwCgAAQBAJ&dq=%22iron+man%27s+armor%22&pg=PA15}} before being redesigned again by Steve Ditko later in the year – this was the first version to feature a red and gold/yellow scheme, which would come to be Iron Man's most recognizable look.Heck, quoted in {{cite news | first=John | last= Peel | title = A Signing Session with Don Heck | work = Comics Feature | issue = #34 | date= March–April 1985 | page= 18}}

Bob Layton would redesign the character's armor several times during his stint on the book. In 2008 he recalled that editorial directions in 1981 were that going into outer space was "a big deal", and devised the first space-going Iron Man suit with this edict in mind. He later devised the 1985 red and silver/white "Silver Centurion" armor with input from Mark Gruenwald, who directed him to base it along samurai motifs. The 1994 "Modular" armor was designed by Tom Morgan.{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|editor=Michael Hoskin|title=Marvel Spotlight: Iron Man|date=April 2008}} When writing the title, David Michelinie avoided overuse of stealth technology in the armor. His eventual successor Len Kaminski disagreed, and in 1994 decided the suit's abilities should be boosted drastically. He devised a component system of armor that could be customised according to various missions, and noted he didn't "like to play fast and loose" with the rules of science and technology.{{cite magazine |last=O'Neill |first=Patrick Daniel |date=February 1994 |title=Men of Iron|issue=30|magazine=Wizard|publisher=Wizard Entertainment}} This "Modular" armor was designed by Tom Morgan, and was the first that could be converted into a "Hulkbuster" configuration.

In Invincible Iron Man #25 (2010), Stark creates a new armor in the aftermath of the "Stark: Disassembled" storyline.{{cite web|url=http://marvel.com/news/comicstories.10844.marvel_unleashes_iron_man~apos~s_new_armor |title=Marvel Unleashes Iron Man's New Armor |publisher=Marvel Comics|date=January 8, 2010}} Created by writer Matt Fraction and artist Ryan Meinerding, this new armor is sleeker in appearance, and is featured in the 2010 crossover storyline the "Heroic Age".{{cite web|url=http://marvel.com/news/comicstories.10914.marvel~colon~_the_heroic_age |title=Marvel: The Heroic Age|publisher=Marvel Comics|date=January 27, 2010}} When writer Tom Taylor and artist Yildiray Cinar created the "Endo-Sym Armor" in 2014, they designed it to glow red/orange when Tony was angry.{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/TomTaylorMade/status/1493109243863437312|publisher=Twitter|author=Taylor, Tom|title=untitled|language=en-us|url-status=live|date=February 14, 2022|accessdate=February 15, 2022|archivedate=February 14, 2022|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20220214063109/https://twitter.com/TomTaylorMade/status/1493109243863437312}}

Fictional history

The first Iron Man armor was created by Stark with the help of Ho Yinsen in issue 39 of Tales of Suspense, which he used to escape captivity. After his escape, Stark created a new version with a wide array of improvements; it was colored gold in this second version. He would then change up the color scheme to a mixture of red and gold, which would become a staple of the armor's appearance throughout successive iterations, before briefly changing to an armor colored red and silver in the 1980s, before returning to the red and gold color scheme during the Armor Wars storyline, with only the occasional change in color scheme for specific armors and storylines, after which he invariably returns to the "classic" red and gold colors.

= Bleeding Edge Armor =

After defeating Norman Osborn in 2010, Stark creates a new "Bleeding Edge" Iron Man suit to replace the Extremis version. Asked whether the Bleeding Edge is an upgrade to Extremis, Stark says, "Nah — this is what comes next." The new armor is a part of Stark's now-posthuman biology; it is stored inside Stark's body, "manifesting" itself when mentally commanded.{{Cite comic|writer=Fraction, Matt|artist=Larocca, Salvador|story=Stark Resilient Part 1: Hammer Girls|title=The Invincible Iron Man|issue=25|volume=5|date=August 2011|publisher=Marvel Comics}} The neurokinetic user-controlled morphologic nanoparticle bundles that form the suit reside in Stark's body, and form a fibrous wetweb of iron and platinum,{{Cite comic|writer=Fraction, Matt|artist=Larocca, Salvador|story=Stark Resilient Part 6: Tony, We Don't Want to Destroy You|title=The Invincible Iron Man|volume=5|issue=30|date=November 2010|publisher=Marvel Comics}} that can be commanded to form any type of structure upon Stark's skin, such as large boxing gloves,{{Cite comic|writer=Fraction, Matt|artist=Larocca, Salvador|story=Fear Itself Part 3: The Apostate|title=The Invincible Iron Man|issue=506|volume=1|date=September 2011|publisher=Marvel Comics}} or weapons, including large guns extending from his arms or a lightsaber-like energy sword with which Iron Man was able to harm one of the Worthy.{{Cite comic|writer=Fraction, Matt|artist=Larocca, Salvador|story=Fear Itself Part 2: Cracked Actor|title=The Invincible Iron Man|volume=1|issue=505|date=August 2011|publisher=Marvel Comics}} The nano-machines can mimic the appearance of clothes, then dissociate to transform into the Iron Man armor as Stark wishes.{{Cite comic|writer=Fraction, Matt|artist=Larocca, Salvador|story=Stark Resilient Part 2: Visionary Men|title=The Invincible Iron Man|issue=26|volume=5|date=September 2011|publisher=Marvel Comics}} The suit adds less than 25 pounds to Stark's body mass. It can stop a howitzer shell.

The armor and Stark's own transhuman body are powered by the high-yield arc reactor mounted in his chest. The reactor augments Stark's intelligence and enables superhuman multitasking and learning. Unlike earlier armors, this new armor does not appear to rely on motors and servos for motion. Instead, the nano-machines create a secondary artificial musculature over Stark's body, upon which additional rigid structures are assembled. This also enables the armor to self-repair and be almost invulnerable, as the armor is capable of transforming and healing itself as long as the power output from the arc reactor is not interrupted or terminated; when the armor is briefly apparently destroyed in a fight with an alternate version of the Scarlet Witch, it is restored to normal after only a matter of seconds (although it remains inactive long enough to require Spider-Man to rescue Stark from plummeting to the ground).{{cite comic|writer=Bendis, Brian Michael|penciller=Romita, John Jr.|inker=Janson, Klaus|title=The Avengers|volume=4|issue=3|date=September 2010|publisher=Marvel Comics}} In the 2012 "Ends of the Earth" storyline, Doctor Octopus is able to disable the armor using technology derived from the armor of Iron Man 2020.{{cite comic|writer=Slott, Dan|artist=Caselli, Stefano|story=Ends of the Earth Part Two: Earth's Mightiest|title=The Amazing Spider-Man|volume=1|issue=683|date=June 2012|publisher=Marvel Comics}}

The suit's repulsor rays, which are located around the knuckles, chest, back, and legs of the armor, as well as in the traditional palms, also function as cameras or "eyeballs", which afford Stark a 360-degree panoramic view. Temporarily replacing the suit's primary composite—iron/platinum—with carbon nanotubes renders it immune to Magneto's powers when he and Iron Man fight over Utopia.{{Cite comic|writer=Aaron, Jason|artist=Kubert, Adam|story=The Invincible Iron Man vs. Magneto|title=AvX: VS|issue=1|date=June 2012|publisher=Marvel Comics}}

After Stark decides to retire as Iron Man, he undergoes a surgical procedure that expels the Bleeding Edge technology from his body, rendering the armor inert.{{Cite comic|writer=Fraction, Matt|artist=Larocca, Salvador|story=Long Way Down Part 2: How to Make a Madman|title=The Invincible Iron Man|volume=1|issue=517|date=July 2012|publisher=Marvel Comics}}

List of armors

In 2008, Marvel issued a handbook called All-New Iron Manual, which issued model numbers to the various armor suits that had been seen in the comics up to that point. When the guide was printed in trade paperback alongside the Iron Manual, the numbering of the armors was revised so that the Model 14 listed in the original printing was now a sub-model of Model 13. Since then other guidebooks have named several newer models, although most armors featured since 2016 have not received official designations.

class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"

|+ class="nowrap"|List of Iron Man armors

ModelDebutNameNotes
Model 01{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|editor=Michael Hoskin|title=Iron Manual|id= {{ISBN|9780785134275}}|date=September 2008}}Tales of Suspense #39 (1963)Build with the aid of Ho Yinsen in captivity
Model 01 Mark IITales of Suspense #40 (1963)Golden AvengerRevised version
Model 02Tales of Suspense #48 (1963)First to use red and gold color scheme; a lightweight suit devised to combat Mister Doll
Model 03Tales of Suspense #56 (1964)Also later piloted by Happy Hogan
Model 04Tales of Suspense #85 (1967)Created to rescue Happy Hogan from the Mandarin; also later piloted by James Rhodes
Model 05Iron Man #142 (1981)Space ArmorSpace capable, created to battle the Sunturion
Model 06Iron Man #218 (1987)Hydro ArmorSubsea capable
Model 07Iron Man #152 (1981)Stealth ArmorCreated to infiltrate Heaven's Hand Fortress in East Germany
Model 08Iron Man #200 (1985)Silver Centurion ArmorCreated to defeat Obadiah Stane's Iron Monger armor
Model 09Iron Man #231 (1988)First used at the conclusion of the Armor Wars
Model 10Iron Man #278 (1992)Space ArmorUsed during Operation: Galactic Storm
Model 11Iron Man #281 (1992)War Machine ArmorLater used by James Rhodes as War Machine
Model 12Iron Man #290 (1993)Neuromimetic Telepresence Unit-150Operated by telepresence
Model 13Iron Man #300 (1994)Modular ArmorCapable of converting into a Hulkbuster configuration
Model 14Iron Man #318 (1995)Arctic Armor
Model 15Iron Man #319 (1995)
Model YT1Iron Man #328 (1996)Created by a teenage version of Tony Stark from Earth-96020
Model CE1Iron Man (vol. 2) #1 (1996)Prometheum ArmorCreated on Counter-Earth
Model 16Iron Man (vol. 3) #1 (1998)Renaissance ArmorCreated after Tony Stark's return from Counter-Earth
Model 17Fantastic Four (vol. 3) #15 (1999)Experimental Safe ArmorSpace capable
Model 18Iron Man: Bad Blood #4 (2000)Outer Atmospheric ArmorSpace capable
Model 19Iron Man (vol. 3) #42 (2001)S.K.I.N. ArmorFlexible alloy shell
Model 20Iron Man (vol. 3) #50 (2002)
Model 21Black Panther (vol. 3) #44 (2002)Stealth ArmorCreated to combat the Black Panther
Model 22Iron Man (vol. 3) #64 (2003)Thorbuster ArmorCreated to combat Thor
Model 23Iron Man (vol. 3) #71 (2003)Ablative Armor
Model 24Iron Man (vol. 3) #73 (2003)Used when serving as the United States Secretary of Defense
Model 25Iron Man (vol. 3) #74 (2004)Replacement for Model 24
Model 26The Incredible Hulk (vol. 3) #71 (2004)Anti-Radiation ArmorCo-created with Robert Bruce Banner
Model 27Iron Man (vol. 3) #83 (2004)High Gravity SuitSpace capable
Model 28Iron Man: Hypervelocity #1 (2007)Used by the artificial intelligence Tony Stark 2.0
Model 29Iron Man (vol. 4) #4 (2005)Extremis ArmorPartly incorporated into Stark's body via an Extremis virus strain
Model 30Iron Man (vol. 4) #7 (2006)Battle ArgonautOnly used by remote before its destruction
Model 31Iron Man (vol. 4) #7 (2006)Hulkbuster ArgonautOnly used by remote before its destruction
Model 32Iron Man (vol. 4) #7 (2006)Subterranean ArgonautOnly used by remote before its destruction
Model 33Iron Man (vol. 4) #7 (2006)Submarine ArgonautOnly used by remote before its destruction
Model 34Iron Man (vol. 4) #7 (2006)Stealth ArgonautOnly used by remote before its destruction
Model 35Wolverine (vol. 3) #45 (2006)Hydro ArmorStolen by Wolverine
Model 36World War Hulk #1 (2007)Hulkbuster ArmorCreated to combat the Hulk
Model 37{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|title=Avengers: Roll Call|volume=1|issue=#1|date=June 2012}}Invincible Iron Man (vol. 2) #25 (2010)Bleeding Edge Armor
Model 38{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|title=All-New, All-Different Marvel Universe|volume=1|issue=#1|date=May 2016}}Avengers vs. X-Men #5 (2012)Phoenix-Killer ArmorCreated to combat the Phoenix Force
Model 39Invincible Iron Man #517 (2012)
Model 40Invincible Iron Man #523 (2012)Black Armor
Model 41Invincible Iron Man #527 (2012)Space capable
Model 42Iron Man (vol. 5) #1 (2012)
Model 43Iron Man (vol. 5) #3 (2012)Stealth Armor
Model 44Iron Man (vol. 5) #4 (2012)Heavy Duty Armor
Model 45Iron Man (vol. 5) #5 (2012)Deep Space ArmorUsed when a member of the Guardians of the Galaxy
Model 46Iron Man (vol. 5) #15 (2012)
Model 47Iron Man (vol. 5) #15 (2012)
Model 48Iron Man (vol.5) #24 (2014)Cold Iron Armor
Model 49Original Sin #3.1 (2014)
Model 50The Avengers (vol. 5) #32 (2014)Endo-Sym ArmorBased on symbiote technology
Model 51Invincible Iron Man (vol. 3) #1 (2015)Model-Prime Armor
Model 52All-New, All-Different Avengers #1 (2015)Hulkbuster Armor
Unbeatable Squirrel Girl Beats Up the Marvel Universe #1 (2016)Created to combat Squirrel Girl
Spider-Man (vol. 2) #9 (2016)Created to combat Captain Marvel
Hunt for Wolverine: Dead Ends #1 (2018)
Tony Stark: Iron Man #1 (2018)
Tony Stark: Iron Man #1 (2018)Fin Fang Foombuster ArmorCreated to combat Fin Fang Foom
Tony Stark: Iron Man #1 (2018)Nano Iron Man Armor
Tony Stark: Iron Man #2 (2018)
Tony Stark: Iron Man #4 (2018)
The Avengers (vol. 8) #5 (2018)Godkiller Armor Mk. II
The Avengers (vol. 8) #9 (2018)Subsea capable
Tony Stark: Iron Man #10 (2019)Godbuster Armor
Tony Stark: Iron Man #14 (2019)
Tony Stark: Iron Man #16 (2019)Ultronbuster Armor
The Avengers (vol. 8) #31 (2020)Ice Armor
Tony Stark: Iron Man #19 (2019)Created by Arno Stark
Iron Man 2020 (vol. 2) #5 (2020)Virtual Armor
Iron Man 2020 (vol. 2) #6 (2020)
Model 70{{cite comic|publisher=Marvel Comics|title=Iron Man|volume=6|issue=#20|date=July 2022|writer=Christopher Cantwell|artist=Ángel Unzueta}}Iron Man (vol. 6) #1 (2020)
Hulk (vol. 5) #1 (2021)Hulkbuster Armor
Thor (vol. 6) #25 (2021)Hulkbuster Armor

In other media

=Film=

{{Main article|Iron Man's armor (Marvel Cinematic Universe)}}

Iron Man's armors feature prominently in several films set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

References

{{Reflist}}