I’m convinced that 2026’s Avengers: Doomsday, many are buzzing with theories. Yet there’s one explanation that’s so strange, so specific, and so Marvel, that it might actually be the real answer. Indeed, a forgotten issue of Marvel’s What If...? offers the perfect way to explain why the MCU’s Doom looks like Tony Stark.

Originally set to culminate in Avengers: The Kang Dynasty, the MCU’s multiverse saga is steering toward a new finale: Avengers: Doomsday. This happened in the wake of the MCU’s future completely in question. Yet the biggest shock was that Robert Downey Jr. is returning – not as Tony Stark, but as the MCU’s version of Victor Von Doom.

Robert Downey Jr's Casting As Doctor Doom Has Raised So Many Questions For The MCU

Many Fan Theories Have Speculated How The MCU Will Explain Doom Looking Like Iron Man

Robert Downey Jr. announcing himself as Doctor Doom at 2024's SDCC

The news that Robert Downey Jr. plays Doctor Doom in Avengers: Doomsday sent the MCU viewers into a speculative frenzy. For more than a decade, RDJ was the Marvel Cinematic Universe. His portrayal of Tony Stark helped build the franchise from the ground up, and his departure in Avengers: Endgame felt like the perfect farewell. Now, not only is he returning, but he’s doing so as one of Marvel’s most iconic villains – and many are struggling to understand how.

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The real head-scratcher is that Downey’s Doom isn’t a variant of Tony Stark. Early rumors suggested audiences might see a multiverse version of Stark who went dark, possibly merging the personas of Iron Man and Doom. That would’ve been an easy fix. However, subsequent reports confirmed that this is, in fact, the MCU’s Victor Von Doom and explicitly not a twisted version of Tony Stark.

This goes beyond the suspension of disbelief – it challenges the entire visual language of the MCU. When a face is that iconic, that recognizable, using it again – especially for a different character – has to come with some kind of narrative justification. Otherwise, it risks confusing audiences and undermining both characters. For Marvel to pull this off, they need something bold. Something comic-book enough to make it all fit. As it turns out, the comics may have already written the answer for them over a decade ago.

The MCU Already Has One Easy Way To Explain Doctor Doom Being Played By Iron Man's Actor When Looking At The Comics

What If? Iron Man: Demon In An Armor Provides The Perfect

Iron Man looks in the mirror in What If Iron Man Demon In An Armor cover

What If? Iron Man: Demon in an Armor (2010) #1 provides the perfect answer to the MCU’s Doom looking like Iron Man. In that one-shot, a fateful college experiment between two brilliant young minds – Tony Stark and Victor Von Doom – goes terribly wrong. The experiment results in Tony Stark’s mind being transferred into Victor Von Doom’s body. Stark, trapped in Doom’s body, has his memories wiped and is deported back to Latveria, where he grows up under the thumb of poverty, political strife, and personal disgrace.

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Meanwhile, Doom thrives in Tony’s life – gaining control of Stark Industries, basking in wealth and prestige, and ultimately taking the mantle of Iron Man for himself. The result is a bizarre reimagining of Marvel’s two greatest egotists. Doom becomes a twisted version of Iron Man – cold, ruthless, powerful. And Stark, robbed of his privilege and identity, walks the hard path toward becoming something more dangerous. It’s a story that swaps more than bodies – it swaps destinies.

Why Adapting Demon In An Armor Would Make Perfect Sense For The MCU's Multiverse Story

Demon In An Armor Depicts Doctor Doom With The Face Of Tony Stark

Iron Man holding up the Infinity Stones about the sacrifice himself in Avengers Endgame

For the MCU, this is the perfect narrative device to explain why Doctor Doom has Tony Stark’s face. All they have to do is flip the script: the MCU's Victor Von Doom could have had his mind transferred into a variant body of Tony Stark. Doom has RDJ's face, and it’s not a coincidence: it’s canon.

Marvel has been leaning heavily into multiverse mechanics ever since Loki, Spider-Man: No Way Home, and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. But Avengers: Doomsday is poised to go even further – and with that comes the opportunity to embrace some truly out-there comic storylines. If they adapt Demon in an Armor, they wouldn’t just solve the RDJ-as-Doom dilemma – they’d also reinforce key multiverse themes in a creative and character-driven way.

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This would mean that Doom’s introduction can build upon Tony Stark’s legacy in the MCU rather than interfere with it – or risk damaging it. It preserves Iron Man’s perfect ending, while still using the character to create a compelling development. It also allows comparable character traits to be explored, as RDJ gets to play a different kind of genius billionaire – one corrupted not by trauma and war, but by ego and ambition. This could even explain Downey’s cryptic comments when announced as Doom: “New mask, same task.”

I'm Genuinely Hoping The MCU Will Adapt Marvel's What If? Story For Their Doctor Doom Backstory

Demon In An Armor Is The Perfect Way To Explain Doom’s Appearance

There are plenty of wild theories out there about how the MCU will justify Robert Downey Jr. playing Doctor Doom. However, none feel as natural – or as narratively rich – as adapting What If? Iron Man: Demon in an Armor. It’s obscure enough that most moviegoers wouldn’t see it coming, but it has all the ingredients needed to pull off a satisfying twist: body swapping, altered destinies, and morally complex character development. These are all, incidentally, the exact same themes explored throughout the Multiverse Saga.

It would also do something Marvel is in desperate need of right now – giving Doctor Doom a truly unique origin story. Doom’s comic backstory is iconic, but it’s also been told and retold across different media. Having him be a sorcerer-scientist from Latveria is expected. Making him that, plus the man who now inhabits Tony Stark’s body, would be a bold and dynamic development.

The MCU has often borrowed loosely from What If? scenarios, but this would be the most direct lift yet. It would also cleverly sidestep any need to resurrect Tony Stark or undo his perfect ending. Instead, it reframes his legacy as something twisted – a legacy Doom has stolen and repurposed.

More importantly, it gives RDJ the chance to completely reinvent himself within the Marvel Universe. He wouldn’t be playing Tony Stark again. He’d be playing someone wearing Tony Stark’s life like a suit of armor – and doing it in the most sinister way imaginable. That’s the kind of storytelling that could make Avengers: Doomsday one of the MCU’s most ambitious entries yet.

Avengeres Doomsday logo placeholder poster
Avengers: Doomsday
Release Date
December 18, 2026
Director
Joe Russo
Writers
Stephen McFeely, Stan Lee
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