A new Marvel project unveils its Captain America and Iron Man redesigns, which provide the ideal template for the MCU’s eventual reboot of Steve Rogers and Tony Stark. Iron Man and Captain America’s costumes communicate their entire identities at a glance. Cap’s look channels his patriotic idealism through bold primary colors and his instantly recognizable winged helmet, which also evoke wartime propaganda. Iron Man embodies futurism, and his sleek red-and-gold armor, glowing arc reactor, and endlessly evolving armor configurations reinforce this image.
The MCU elevated both character designs into pop culture icons by grounding them in realism. Captain America’s tactical suits, especially from Captain America: The Winter Soldier onward, transformed Cap’s bright comic-book costume into believable military gear. Similarly, Iron Man’s armor established the grounded but increasingly streamlined style Tony Stark’s suits would retain right from the start. These designs became so influential that later comics, video games like Marvel’s Avengers and Midnight Suns, and animated projects like Avengers Assemble and Ultimate Spider-Man have copied them.
Sometimes, the most dramatic visual overhauls come from outside the comics, only for the comics themselves to adopt them eventually.
Iron Man And Captain America Debut Brand-New Costumes
Marvel Tōkon: First Strike #1; Written By Steve Orlando, Tom Waltz, And Josh Trujillo; Art By Bruno Büll, Áthila Fabbio, And Ryusei Yamada
Produced by PlayStation Studios, Arc System Works, and Marvel Games, the 4v4 tag team fighting game Tōkon: Fighting Souls assembles a selection of Marvel icons for its August 2026 release. Every playable character sports a highly-stylized redesign. Two of the standout redesigns are Iron Man and Captain America, who put a fresh twist on their classic costumes: Iron Man wears a sharp, ultra-detailed Gundam mech-inspired suit of armor, while Captain America sports a reinforced helmet and a jacket on top of his uniform, which resembles Cap’s Avengers: Age of Ultron suit. The eleven characters revealed so far are:
- Magik
- Ghost Rider
- Ms. Marvel
- Doctor Doom
- Star-Lord
- Storm
- Wolverine
- Spider-Man
- Danger
- Captain America
- Iron Man
Other Tōkon: Fighting Souls characters also display parallels to famous Marvel media. Wolverine’s iconic yellow-and-blue costume bears a certain resemblance to Hugh Jackman’s Deadpool & Wolverine suit, with heavy padding and more subdued blue accents on his torso, but with much bigger wing flaps than his live-action counterpart. Meanwhile, Spider-Man’s costume features white biceps and soles that call back to Sony’s Spider-Man video game, as well as black accents that resemble those seen in Tom Holland’s early MCU suits.
The MCU Needs A Dramatically Different Redesign For Iron Man And Captain America
Iron Man And Captain America Designs Need To Start Diverging From The MCU’s Visual Language
It’s no secret that the MCU has influenced all Marvel media since its inception, and many Captain America and Iron Man iterations have adopted certain features from Evans and Downey’s portrayals. Several Iron Man suits in the comics, for instance, have the same faceplate as most of Tony Stark’s MCU armors. However, the MCU can’t continue forever without bringing back its two most famous heroes, which creates the challenge of establishing new visual identities for both Avengers. To grant the next generation of actors a legitimate fresh start, Marvel needs to execute a ground-up aesthetic overhaul that alters their silhouettes, palettes, and finishes.
Marvel Officially Unveils Captain America’s Armored Redesign for New Appearance
Marvel has revealed an unbelievable new costume for Captain America, as Steve Rogers throws on an imposing suit of enhanced armor.
For Iron Man, this means aggressively moving away from the squarish contours of Stark’s first 48 suits. The MCU could draw inspiration from the chunky aesthetic of the mid-1990s Modular Armor featured prominently in the classic animated series, or the extremely sharp and angular look of the controversial Model Prime armor. Perhaps incorporating visible, heavy-duty mechanical pistons, exposed wiring, and an asymmetrical arc reactor would immediately communicate a fresh and unpolished approach. Otherwise, a futuristic, anime-inspired design like Tōkon: Fighting Souls‘ Iron Man could be the way to go.
The MCU’s next Thor portrayal could finally wear the winged helmet, and a rebooted Hawkeye could finally wear his classic mask.
Similarly, Steve Rogers’ inevitable return requires a departure from the classic, fabric-based military uniforms Chris Evans wore. Evans’ Captain America suit only featured the iconic scales in Avengers: Endgame, and he never sported the physical wings that make the Sentinel of Liberty’s helmet so iconic. Likewise, Evans’ costumes slowly abandoned the white accents on the arms and torso, which a redesign like the one from the pre-Secret Empire comic Captain America: Steve Rogers could fix. Even a simple addition like Tōkon: Fighting Souls‘ jacket could completely overhaul Cap’s classic look.
Do you like Marvel Tōkon: First Strike‘s Iron Man and Captain America redesigns?
Marvel Tōkon: First Strike #1 is available from Marvel Comics August 6, 2026.
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- Alias
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Iron Man
- Franchise
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Marvel
- NAME
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Anthony Edward “Tony” Stark
- FIRST APP
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“Tales of Suspense” #39 (1963)
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- First Appearance
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Captain America Comics
- Alias
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Steve Rogers, John Walker, Sam Wilson
- Franchise
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Marvel
- Race
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Human
- Alliance
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Avengers, Invaders, S.H.I.E.L.D., U.S. Army

