====== Iron Man ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Anthony "Tony" Stark is a genius inventor, industrialist, and futurist who, after a life-altering trauma, creates a sophisticated suit of powered armor to become the armored Avenger, Iron Man.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Iron Man is the quintessential fusion of humanity and technology in the Marvel Universe. He serves as a founding member and often the financial and technological backbone of the [[avengers]]. His intellect and resources position him as a primary problem-solver for global, and often cosmic, threats. * **Primary Impact:** Stark's most significant influence is his personal journey of redemption. He evolves from a self-interested weapons manufacturer into a selfless hero, grappling with themes of responsibility, the future of technology, and the weight of his own creations. This character arc, particularly his struggle with alcoholism in the comics, has defined him for decades. * **Key Incarnations:** The core difference lies in their public identity and narrative scope. The [[#Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)|Earth-616]] Iron Man maintained a secret identity for years, pretending the armored hero was his bodyguard, and has a sprawling, complex history involving corporate espionage, biological enhancements ([[#Extremis (Iron Man vol. 4 #1-6)|Extremis]]), and acting as Director of [[shield]]. The [[#Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)|MCU]] version immediately reveals his identity, and his story is a focused, self-contained arc that serves as the foundational narrative of the Infinity Saga, culminating in his heroic sacrifice. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Iron Man first appeared in **//Tales of Suspense// #39**, cover-dated March 1963. He was a product of the Cold War era, conceived by a creative team at the height of their powers: plotter and editor [[stan_lee]], scripter [[larry_lieber]], and artists [[don_heck]] and [[jack_kirby]]. Kirby designed the first, bulky gray armor, while Heck handled the interior art and human characters. Stan Lee's stated goal was to create a character that the then-prevalent youth counter-culture would ostensibly despise and then, through storytelling, be won over by. In an era of anti-war sentiment, Lee deliberately created the "quintessential capitalist": a fabulously wealthy industrialist and war profiteer. The character was partially inspired by the real-world inventor, aviator, and eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes, whom Lee saw as "one of the most colorful men of our time." The initial origin story was set against the backdrop of the Vietnam War, placing Tony Stark firmly in the contemporary geopolitical landscape. This setting would later be retconned multiple times to keep the character's origin feeling modern, shifting from Vietnam to the Gulf War and, most recently, to Afghanistan, a change that heavily influenced the 2008 film adaptation. Iron Man's creation explored the duality of technology—its potential for both immense destruction and incredible salvation—a theme that remains central to the character to this day. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The circumstances of Tony Stark's transformation into Iron Man share a common core across universes—a brilliant but arrogant man brought low by his own weaponry and forced to build his salvation from the scraps of his past—but the specifics differ significantly. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Anthony Edward Stark was born the son of genius inventor and industrialist Howard Stark. A boy genius, he entered MIT at the age of 15 and inherited [[stark_industries]] after his parents were killed in a car crash (later revealed to be an assassination). As the new CEO, Tony pushed the company to new heights, designing advanced "transistorized" weaponry for the U.S. military. While in Vietnam to observe a field test of his new weapons, Stark's convoy was attacked. He tripped a booby trap, and a piece of shrapnel lodged itself critically close to his heart. He was captured by the North Vietnamese warlord Wong-Chu. He was informed that the shrapnel would kill him within days. Wong-Chu offered a deal: if Stark built a powerful new weapon for him, he would allow Stark's life to be saved by a surgeon. Stark was forced to share a cell with another prisoner, the world-renowned physicist and Nobel laureate, Professor Ho Yinsen. Realizing the warlord would never honor his deal, the two geniuses devised a plan. They would build the weapon Wong-Chu demanded, but it would be a powered suit of armor equipped with heavy weaponry. Critically, the suit's chestplate would house a magnetic field generator, a device that could keep the shrapnel from migrating into Tony's heart and killing him. Working feverishly, they constructed the first Iron Man armor—a bulky, gray, transistor-powered exoskeleton. As they prepared to power it up, Wong-Chu's men grew suspicious and advanced on the lab. Knowing the suit needed more time to reach full power, Ho Yinsen made a heroic sacrifice. He charged the guards, distracting them long enough for Tony to power up the suit and save himself. Enraged by his friend's death, the newly armored Stark decimated Wong-Chu's forces and escaped. Back in America, Stark had to wear the metallic chestplate under his clothes at all times to survive. He redesigned and streamlined the armor, painting it gold (and later the iconic red-and-gold) and adopting the moniker Iron Man. To protect his identity and avoid suspicion, he created the elaborate fiction that Iron Man was his personal bodyguard and the company's mascot. This ruse was maintained for decades, becoming a core part of his early characterization. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The origin presented in the film //Iron Man// (2008) modernizes the comic book narrative for a 21st-century audience. Tony Stark (portrayed by Robert Downey Jr.) is the charismatic, witty, and profoundly arrogant CEO of Stark Industries, the world's leading weapons manufacturer. His story begins in contemporary, war-torn Afghanistan, where he is demonstrating his company's latest creation, the devastating "Jericho" missile system. Following the successful demonstration, Stark's military convoy is ambushed by the Ten Rings, a clandestine terrorist organization. During the attack, a Stark Industries missile explodes near him, riddling his chest with shrapnel. He awakens in a cave, a prisoner of the Ten Rings. He discovers an electromagnet, powered by a car battery, surgically embedded in his chest. His fellow captive, Dr. Ho Yinsen, explains the device is keeping the shrapnel from reaching his heart. The terrorists, led by a man named Raza, demand that Stark build them a Jericho missile. Similar to the comic version, Stark and Yinsen agree to comply but secretly build a different device. Instead of a simple chestplate, Stark miniaturizes his father's experimental Arc Reactor technology, creating a self-sustaining power source that is far more powerful and efficient than the car battery. This new Arc Reactor not only keeps him alive but is also powerful enough to run a suit of powered armor. Using a box of scraps from old Stark Industries weapons, they construct the "Mark I" armor. The suit is a brutalist, functional machine built for escape. As in the comics, Yinsen sacrifices his life to buy Stark the time he needs to power up the suit. Stark then uses the Mark I's raw power and weaponry to fight his way out of the cave and is eventually rescued in the desert by his friend, Lt. Colonel James "Rhodey" Rhodes. The experience is profoundly transformative. Haunted by the realization that his own weapons were being used by terrorists, Tony returns to the United States and, at a press conference, stuns the world by announcing that Stark Industries will cease all weapons manufacturing. He then dedicates himself to perfecting the armor, creating the sleek Mark II and the combat-ready, red-and-gold Mark III. In a radical departure from the source material, at the end of the film, Tony Stark eschews the idea of a secret identity entirely. Instead of following the prepared alibi, he looks directly at the press and boldly declares, **"I am Iron Man."** This single moment established the MCU's commitment to a more grounded and consequential approach to superhero identities. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== While Tony Stark's core intellect is a constant, the specific tools and physiological enhancements he possesses vary greatly between the comic and cinematic universes. === Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Stark's capabilities in the comics have evolved dramatically over sixty years, often incorporating biological enhancements that blur the line between man and machine. **Abilities and Intellect:** * **Super-Genius Intellect:** Tony Stark is consistently ranked among the top three smartest mortal beings on Earth-616, alongside figures like [[reed_richards|Reed Richards]] and [[doctor_doom|Doctor Doom]]. His expertise is polymathic, spanning mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, computer science, physics, and chemistry. He is a master inventor and tactician, capable of creating solutions to seemingly impossible problems. * **Extremis Enhancement:** For a significant period, Stark's biology was rewritten by the **Extremis** techno-organic virus. This gave him a direct neural link to his armor and other technologies, allowing him to control them with a thought. It also granted him a potent healing factor and the ability to store the armor's control interface (the undersheath) within the hollows of his bones, allowing for near-instantaneous suit-up. * **R.T. Node:** After the Extremis virus was purged, he later relied on a chest-implanted Repulsor Tech (R.T.) Node. While initially necessary for survival, it also enhanced his mind, allowing him to perceive and process information like a supercomputer. **The Iron Man Armory:** The number of Iron Man armors in the comics is vast and ever-changing, likely numbering well over sixty distinct models, not including thousands of Iron Legion drones. Each armor is a technological marvel, but several stand out as milestones. * **Classic Armor (Model 4):** The quintessential red-and-gold suit that defined his look for decades. Powered by a solar-recharged chest plate, it featured boot jets for flight, palm-mounted Repulsor Rays for blasts and stabilization, and a powerful chest-mounted Unibeam. * **Silver Centurion (Model 8):** A radical aesthetic departure with a silver-and-red color scheme. This armor was significantly more powerful than its predecessors and incorporated a "chameleon effect" for stealth and more focused energy absorption capabilities. * **War Machine Armor (Model 11):** Originally the "Variable Threat Response Battle Suit," this bulky, heavily-weaponized armor was designed by Tony but first famously piloted by [[war_machine|James Rhodes]]. It traded finesse for overwhelming firepower, featuring shoulder-mounted machine guns, missile pods, and laser cannons. * **Modular Armor (Model 13):** A staple of the 1990s, this armor's key feature was its ability to integrate different mission-specific "modules" or "pods." This allowed Tony to swap out weapon systems or add specialized equipment on the fly, including the first comic book version of the Hulkbuster add-on. * **Extremis Armor (Model 29):** The first suit designed to work with his Extremis-enhanced biology. It was faster, stronger, and more responsive than any before it. The undersheath was stored inside his body, and the exterior components would fly to him at supersonic speeds and assemble around him. * **Bleeding Edge Armor (Model 37):** The pinnacle of his biological integration phase. This entire suit was composed of nano-machines stored within his body, controlled purely by thought. It could form any shape or weapon he could imagine, effectively making the suit an extension of his will. * **Specialty Armors:** Answering common fan questions like "Does Iron Man have a suit for Thor?", the answer is yes. Stark has built dozens of specialized suits, including the **Hulkbuster** (a massive exoskeleton designed to fight the Hulk), the **Thorbuster** (powered by an Asgardian crystal to fight Thor), **Stealth Armor**, **Space Armor**, and even the **Phoenix-Buster**. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The MCU's Tony Stark is a pure technologist; he possesses no inherent superpowers. His genius is his only weapon, and the armors are its ultimate expression. The progression of his suits is a clear, linear narrative of technological advancement. **Abilities and Intellect:** * **Genius-Level Intellect:** Much like his comic counterpart, the MCU's Stark is a peerless engineer. He is shown reverse-engineering alien technology, creating a new element to power his Arc Reactor, and co-inventing time travel. His defining trait is his ability to rapidly innovate under extreme pressure. **The Iron Man Armory:** The MCU armory is methodically cataloged, with 85 known "Mark" designations by the time of //Avengers: Endgame//. * **Mark I:** The crude, powerful suit built in a cave. It featured flamethrowers and a rocket but was bulletproof enough to withstand heavy machine-gun fire. * **Mark III:** The first armor with the classic red-and-gold hot-rod color scheme. It established the standard MCU Iron Man feature set: flight, repulsors, unibeam, and an onboard AI (J.A.R.V.I.S.). * **Mark V (Suitcase Armor):** Featured in //Iron Man 2//, this armor was designed for portability, folding into a compact briefcase. It offered less protection but could be deployed in seconds, a direct response to the ambush in Monaco. * **Mark VII:** Deployed remotely via bracelet in //The Avengers//, this suit was designed for rapid response to extreme threats, featuring additional laser systems and missile pods to combat the Chitauri. * **Mark XLII (Prodigal Son):** Seen in //Iron Man 3//, this was a prehensile suit whose individual pieces could fly to Tony separately and assemble on his body. It could also be piloted remotely. This technology was the basis for his **Iron Legion**. * **Mark XLIV (Hulkbuster):** A massive, modular suit deployed from an orbital platform codenamed "Veronica." It was designed with the singular purpose of restraining an out-of-control Hulk, featuring grappling hooks, replacement parts, and overwhelming brute force. * **Mark L (Bleeding Edge):** The first MCU suit to utilize nanotechnology. Stored in a housing unit on his chest, this armor flowed over Tony's body instantly. The nanites could be reconfigured on the fly to form powerful shields, blades, rocket boosters, and other constructs, making it his most versatile suit to date. * **Mark LXXXV:** His final armor, seen in //Avengers: Endgame//. It was an upgraded version of the Mark L, with a more classic "muscle" design. Crucially, it was durable and adaptable enough to house and channel the cosmic power of all six Infinity Stones, allowing Tony to perform the universe-saving snap. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== Tony Stark's complex personality—a blend of arrogance, charm, and deep-seated insecurity—forges equally complex relationships that define his journey. ==== Core Allies ==== * **James "Rhodey" Rhodes / War Machine:** Tony's closest friend and moral compass. In the comics, Rhodey was a Marine pilot who met Tony in Asia after his initial escape. In the MCU, he is a lifelong friend and a high-ranking Air Force officer. In both versions, Rhodey is the one person who can consistently call Tony out on his behavior. Their friendship was famously tested in the "Armor Wars" storyline when Tony attacked government agents, forcing Rhodey to intervene. As War Machine, he is Tony's most trusted partner in battle. * **Pepper Potts / Rescue:** Virginia "Pepper" Potts begins as Tony's sharp, indispensable executive assistant. Over time, their professional relationship blossoms into a deep romance. She is often the stabilizing force in his chaotic life, eventually becoming the CEO of Stark Industries. In both continuities, Pepper eventually dons her own suit of armor, codenamed **Rescue**, to save Tony. In the MCU, their relationship is the emotional anchor of his entire saga, culminating in their marriage and the birth of their daughter, Morgan. * **Steve Rogers / Captain America:** The "Man out of Time" and the "Man of the Future." Their relationship is one of profound mutual respect layered over constant ideological friction. Steve's unwavering morality often clashes with Tony's pragmatic, sometimes ethically ambiguous, futurism. This fundamental difference in worldview is the driving force behind the //Civil War// storyline in both comics and film. Despite their conflicts, they develop a deep bond, with Steve representing the heroic ideal Tony secretly aspires to and Tony representing the complex future Steve must learn to navigate. * **J.A.R.V.I.S. and Edwin Jarvis:** This represents a major divergence. In the comics, **Edwin Jarvis** is the loyal human butler to the Avengers. In the MCU, **J.A.R.V.I.S.** (Just A Rather Very Intelligent System) is Tony's snarky AI assistant who manages his home, lab, and suits. The MCU's J.A.R.V.I.S. eventually becomes the foundational code for the synthezoid [[vision|Vision]], adding a powerful layer of parental tragedy to Tony's creation of Ultron. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **The Mandarin:** In the comics, the Mandarin is Iron Man's definitive arch-nemesis. A brilliant scientist and master martial artist of Chinese descent, he wields ten rings of immense power recovered from a crashed alien starship. He represents a mystical, ancient threat in direct opposition to Iron Man's modern technology. The MCU's handling of the character was complex; //Iron Man 3// presented him as a fictional terrorist persona played by an actor, with Aldrich Killian being the true villain. This was later retconned in //Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings//, which introduced the //real// leader of the Ten Rings, Wenwu, a tragic and powerful figure who better embodied the spirit of the comic character. * **Obadiah Stane / Iron Monger:** A ruthless business rival of Howard Stark who becomes Tony's mentor before turning on him. In the comics, Stane's company, Stane International, executes a hostile takeover of Stark Industries, driving Tony into a spiral of alcoholism. Stane then creates his own armor, the Iron Monger, from Stark's designs. In the MCU, Stane is the primary antagonist of the first film, having orchestrated the Ten Rings attack to have Tony killed so he could take over the company. * **Justin Hammer:** A rival defense contractor who embodies everything Tony used to be, but without the genius or charm. In the comics and the MCU (//Iron Man 2//), Hammer is portrayed as a perpetually second-rate competitor who tries to replicate Iron Man's technology and consistently fails, often resorting to hiring supervillains to do his dirty work. ==== Affiliations ==== * **The Avengers:** Tony Stark is a founding member of the Avengers in all primary continuities. He is the team's chief inventor and financier, providing them with their headquarters (Avengers Tower, Avengers Mansion), Quinjets, and technology. However, his belief that he knows best has often led to catastrophic conflict within the team, most notably his creation of Ultron and his leadership role during the Superhuman Civil War. * **The Illuminati (Comics Only):** This affiliation is a cornerstone of his comic book character. The Illuminati was a secret cabal of the most brilliant and powerful minds in the Marvel Universe (including Stark, Reed Richards, Professor X, Black Bolt, Doctor Strange, and Namor). They met in secret to shape world events and neutralize threats before they emerged. Their morally questionable decisions, such as launching the Hulk into space (leading to //World War Hulk//) and attempting to prevent Incursions, have had disastrous, universe-altering consequences. * **S.H.I.E.L.D.:** Following the comic book //Civil War//, Tony Stark was appointed the new Director of S.H.I.E.L.D. This put him in a position of immense global power but also immense pressure, forcing him to hunt down his former friends and allies who refused to register with the government. His tenure was fraught with controversy and ended with the Skrull Secret Invasion, which left his reputation and technology compromised. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== Several key storylines have defined Iron Man, pushing his character to its limits and cementing his place in the Marvel pantheon. ==== Demon in a Bottle (Iron Man #120-128) ==== Considered a landmark in comic book storytelling, this 1979 arc by David Michelinie and John Romita Jr. confronted Tony Stark's alcoholism. After a series of personal and professional failures, including a hostile takeover attempt by Justin Hammer that led to malfunctions in his armor, Tony succumbed to the pressures of his dual life and became an alcoholic. The story was revolutionary for its time, treating the subject with a seriousness rarely seen in superhero comics. It portrayed Tony not fighting a supervillain, but his own internal demons. His struggle and eventual path to recovery added a layer of profound human vulnerability to the man inside the iron suit, and his battle with alcoholism has remained a core tenet of his character ever since. ==== Armor Wars (Iron Man #225-231) ==== This 1987-88 storyline explores the ultimate consequence of Stark's genius: what happens when his technology falls into the wrong hands? After discovering that his designs have been stolen by the spymaster Spymaster and sold on the black market, Tony realizes that numerous villains (and even some government-sanctioned heroes like Stingray) are now using his tech. Believing he is solely responsible, he embarks on a ruthless, one-man crusade to hunt down and neutralize every piece of armor based on his designs. This "Armor War" puts him in direct conflict with [[captain_america]] and the U.S. government, forcing him to operate outside the law and making him a fugitive. The storyline is a powerful exploration of technological proliferation and personal responsibility. ==== Extremis (Iron Man vol. 4 #1-6) ==== In 2005, writer Warren Ellis and artist Adi Granov modernized Iron Man for the 21st century. The story introduced Extremis, a nanotech "super-soldier" virus. After being critically injured in a fight with an Extremis-enhanced terrorist, Tony is forced to inject a modified version of the virus into his own nervous system to survive. The process nearly kills him but ultimately transforms him, granting him a direct mind-machine interface with all technology, a healing factor, and the ability to store his armor's undersheath inside his own body. This new origin story heavily influenced the 2008 //Iron Man// film's tone and visual style, and the Extremis technology itself became the central plot device for the villains in //Iron Man 3//. ==== Civil War ==== In the 2006-07 crossover event //Civil War//, a tragic incident involving a superhero battle results in the deaths of hundreds of civilians, including many children. In response, the U.S. government passes the Superhuman Registration Act (SRA), requiring all super-powered individuals to unmask and register as government agents. Haunted by his own past irresponsibility, Tony Stark becomes the public face of the Pro-Registration side, believing that accountability and training are essential for the superhero community. This places him in direct opposition to Captain America, who sees the SRA as a violation of civil liberties. The resulting conflict fractures the superhero community, turning friend against friend. Tony makes numerous morally compromised decisions, including creating a clone of Thor who murders Goliath and imprisoning his former allies in a Negative Zone prison. While his side ultimately "wins," the cost to his reputation and soul is immense. The MCU adapted this conflict in //Captain America: Civil War//, changing the catalyst to the Sokovia Accords and making the personal conflict over Bucky Barnes the emotional core. ==== The Infinity Saga (MCU) ==== Unlike a single comic storyline, Tony Stark's most iconic arc in the MCU is the entirety of the Infinity Saga, from //Iron Man// (2008) to //Avengers: Endgame// (2019). This eleven-year journey charts his evolution from a self-described "genius, billionaire, playboy, philanthropist" to the universe's greatest savior. His arc is driven by a form of cosmic PTSD after the Battle of New York, creating "a suit of armor around the world" in the form of Ultron, which backfires disastrously. This failure fuels his support for the Sokovia Accords in //Civil War//. His greatest fear is realized in //Avengers: Infinity War// when Thanos succeeds, and Tony is left stranded in space, having failed to protect his protégé, Peter Parker. His final act in //Avengers: Endgame// is the ultimate fulfillment of his journey. Wielding the Infinity Stones, he sacrifices his own life to snap Thanos and his armies out of existence, bringing his story full circle from the selfish man in a cave to the hero who laid down his life for the universe. His final spoken line, a defiant "And I... am... Iron Man," echoes his first public declaration and cements his legacy. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Ultimate Marvel (Earth-1610):** This version of Tony Stark, created for the Ultimate Universe, was even more reckless and publicly flamboyant than his 616 counterpart. His origin was tied to a benign, inoperable brain tumor that effectively spread his consciousness across his entire body, granting him his enhanced intellect. He was famously a functioning alcoholic for much of his tenure with the Ultimates. This version's witty, snarky personality, as well as his relationship with S.H.I.E.L.D., was a significant influence on Robert Downey Jr.'s portrayal in the MCU. * **Superior Iron Man (Earth-616 post-AXIS):** Following the //AXIS// event, which magically inverted the moral compasses of heroes and villains, Tony Stark emerged as a completely egocentric, manipulative, and cruel version of himself. He moved to San Francisco and released a version of the Extremis virus as a free app that made users physically perfect. He then began charging a crippling daily fee of $99.99, holding the public's self-esteem for ransom. He built a new, sleek, white symbiote-based armor and represented the darkest possible manifestation of his intellect and capitalism. * **Iron Man 2020 (Arno Stark):** Originally a villainous descendant of Tony from the future year 2020, the concept was later rebooted. It was revealed that Tony Stark was adopted, and **Arno Stark** was the true biological son of Howard and Maria, kept hidden due to his frail health. A fellow super-genius, Arno eventually took on the mantle of Iron Man 2020 in the present day, using a more aggressive and technologically advanced suit of armor with a distinct gear-shaped unibeam. ===== See Also ===== * [[avengers]] * [[captain_america]] * [[stark_industries]] * [[war_machine]] * [[the_mandarin]] * [[shield]] * [[civil_war]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Tony Stark's original origin in 1963 was explicitly set during the Vietnam War, with his captor being the communist warlord Wong-Chu. To keep the character modern, this has been retconned multiple times. In the 1990s, it was shifted to the Gulf War, and by the 2000s, it was established as having taken place in Afghanistan, which became the setting for the 2008 film.)) ((Stan Lee has frequently cited industrialist, filmmaker, and aviator Howard Hughes as a primary inspiration for the personality of Tony Stark, wanting to capture the essence of a brilliant, eccentric, and adventurous billionaire.)) ((Robert Downey Jr.'s casting as Tony Stark is considered one of the most perfect and influential casting decisions in cinematic history. His own real-life story of overcoming personal demons mirrored Stark's character arc, and he ad-libbed many of the character's most iconic lines.)) ((The famous line "I am Iron Man" at the end of the first film was an ad-lib by Robert Downey Jr. The script had Stark sticking to a pre-written alibi. Director Jon Favreau decided to keep the line, a decision that fundamentally shaped the future of the MCU by largely abandoning the concept of secret identities for its main heroes.)) ((In the comics, Tony Stark maintained the secret identity of Iron Man for over 40 years, finally revealing it to the public in //Iron Man// vol. 3 #55 (2002), just before the events leading to //Civil War//.)) ((In the MCU, Tony has utilized several different AI assistants after the "death" of J.A.R.V.I.S. These include F.R.I.D.A.Y. (Female Replacement Intelligent Digital Assistant Youth), who assists him from //Age of Ultron// through //Endgame//, and E.D.I.T.H. (Even Dead, I'm The Hero), the tactical intelligence system he bequeaths to Peter Parker in //Spider-Man: Far From Home//.))