IRON MAN — HEROES RETURN
MARVEL LEGENDS (HASBRO)
“Following his apparent demise at the hands of Onslaught alongside the other Avengers, Tony Stark returns home with a new armor and new focus.”
In the 1996, on the heals of the success of Image Comics, a company that had been formed when a bunch of Marvel’s superstar artists all left to start their own thing, Marvel, who were trying to recapture their early ’90s success, decided to hand some of their more downtrodden characters over to Rob Liefeld and Jim Lee’s Extreme Studios and WildStorm Studios. The Avengers, Captain America, Iron Man, and the FF, who all perished during the Onslaught event, were completely rebooted, in new, totally extreme ways. Well, totally ’90s ways. “Heroes Reborn” lasted a year, and though it saw an uptick in the sales of the four books it relaunched, the whole ordeal was far from a critical success. It was all undone in 1997’s “Heroes Return,” which set things more or less back to where they were before. Of course, “where they were before” for Iron Man was extraordinarily messy, so Marvel used the whole thing to do some in-universe rebooting for Tony as a whole. And, he even got a fancy new armor out of the whole thing!
THE FIGURE ITSELF
Iron Man – Heroes Return is the one non-numbered figure in the Totally Awesome Hulk Series of Marvel Legends, as he’s the double pack that doesn’t contribute to the Build-A-Figure. As the name indicates, this is Tony’s armor from the Heroes Return era, specifically the Model 16, which he wore for a while during the relaunch of both his own book and Avengers. It was designed by Alex Ross for a pitch that he put together with Kurt Busiek for the Iron Man solo book *before* it got totally broken. When Heroes Return came along, Busiek was writing Iron Man and wound up dusting it off. It’s only prior toy treatment was a Minimate back in 2012, but it’s gotten no Legends, and it was conspicuously absent from Toy Biz’s ’90s run. Also, fun fact, this armor would eventually become sentient, technically making this sort of a new character. Yay new character! The figure stands 6 1/2 inches tall and he has 32 points of articulation. At his core, this Iron Man is using a good chunk of parts from the 80th Iron Man, which has served as a starting point for a fair number of Iron Men at this point. Apart from still
having visible pins (a recurring issue with this set), it’s not a bad base, especially for an armor that was deliberately trying to recall earlier Iron Man designs. He gets a new head, upper torso, pelvis, gloves, and boots, courtesy of sculptor Dennis Chan, in order to properly move him over to the Model 16’s set-up. He also gets some shoulder pads, which work the way of the newer Black Series and Classified Series, where they spin with the arm. It requires breaking up the flow of the sculpt a bit, but it also means that they won’t end up warped if you leave him posed for too long. Beyond that, the new pieces work really well to capture 16’s design as seen in the comics, especially leaning into Perez’s take on it. It’s got a very sharp look to it, and the extra smaller details really add some visual intrigue. Most of the figure’s color work is handled via molded plastic, which works well enough. He leans into gold over yellow, and I’m iffy on that some times, but with this particular armor, I really don’t mind. If anything, I kind of wish the red was more metallic to match, because as it stands, it feels a little too flat by comparison. Not bad, or anything, but a little flat. Iron man is packed with two sets of hands and a pair of blast effects. It’s too bad we couldn’t get an extra head with the face plat lifted. As it is, he feels a little light, especially with no Build-A-Figure piece.
THE ME HALF OF THE EQUATION
As a kid, there were three Iron Man armors that defined the character for me, based on my main ways of taking in his story. I loved the classic armor because of the Ruby Spears cartoons, I loved the Modular armor because of the ’90s cartoon, and I loved this armor because it’s what he was wearing when I got into the Avengers comics. It doesn’t get the same kind of toy coverage as the other two, which is a shame, because it’s a really fun design. It also makes for a really fun toy. And I’ve got another figure for my Busiek/Perez Avengers line-up!
Thanks to my sponsors over at All Time Toys for setting me up with this figure to review. If you’re looking for cool toys both old and new, please check out their website and their eBay storefront.


