Avengers Doomsday: How Tony Stark in Dr. Doom?

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Doomsday

Everyone is confused about how Dr. Doom looks like Tony Stark in Doomsday. In this article, I have discussed a fan theory based on Avengers: Doomsday.

In Endgame, when Tony goes back in time and meets his dad, Howard Stark, and Howard told him that his wife—Tony’s mom—was pregnant, Tony got confused, like something major had gone wrong.

“My wife is expecting… and I spend too much time at the office.”

You probably ignored that moment, but the reason Tony was confused was because, according to his calculations, he should’ve already been born by then—but he hadn’t.

Also, in Iron Man 2, Howard once told Tony:

“My greatest creation… is you.”

Now, the word creation might actually hint that the person we thought was Tony Stark wasn’t Howard’s biological son at all.

Yes, that’s right.

And believe me, the Avengers Doomsday Theory I’m about to explain will make you feel like Marvel has been deceiving us for the past 15-20 years.

The person we believed to be Tony Stark was never actually Tony Stark.

He was, in fact… Victor Von Doom.

He was right in front of us all along, and we never realized it. And believe me, by the end of this video, if your brain doesn’t explode, feel free to dislike it! I might be the first creator to ever ask for dislikes, but I really believe in this theory—and I’ll give you proof too.


Marvel didn’t bring back RDJ out of desperation. The truth is: RDJ has been playing Victor Von Doom all along.

First of all, let me tell you: way before Tony Stark, back in 2005, RDJ had auditioned for the role of Doctor Doom in Fantastic Four. That role has always been in his destiny. He didn’t get it then, but nearly 20 years later, his dream is finally coming true—he’s going to play the real Victor Von Doom.

This proves that Marvel had this plan for RDJ to be Doom not recently, but for decades. Even Kevin Feige and high-level Marvel execs were aware of it.


Recently, the Russo Brothers said that they weren’t planning to return to Marvel. They couldn’t find the right “entry point” for the story—something perfect that would justify their return.

But finally, they heard an idea involving RDJ and Tony Stark that completely shocked them—and convinced them to come back.

Marvel fired Kang, paid RDJ $100 million, and announced Doomsday and Secret Wars just because of that one idea. That’s how powerful it was.


Let me confirm something: RDJ’s return isn’t about desperation—it’s because only he can play Doom.

Some fans are concerned there’s been no buildup for Doom like there was for Thanos. But after hearing this theory, you’ll see: that Doom has been getting built up for the past 20 years.


The Theory: Avengers: Doomsday – Kang is the Villain

Doom is actually He Who Remains. All the Kang variants are being hunted by Doom, and he’s justified in doing so.

Why?

Because when He Who Remains created the “Secret Timeline” (Earth-616), he silenced all the other timelines—including the one where Doom existed.

Naturally, Doom is angry. But the craziness doesn’t stop there.


Many believe Victor Von Doom is just an evil Tony Stark variant—a Tony from another universe who turned bad.

But the actual case is the opposite.

The Tony Stark we’ve known all these years was never really Tony—it was a variant of Victor Von Doom!

Now that sounds insane, right? But you can’t just make a claim like that without a solid reason.


And that’s where Marvel’s genius comes in.

Remember in Endgame how Tony reacted when Howard said his wife was pregnant?

Remember in Iron Man 2 when Howard said, “You are my greatest creation”?

Marvel has been teasing Doom all along—through tiny, seemingly meaningless moments.


But why didn’t anyone ever realize this? Why did everyone call him Tony?

Because He Who Remains erased Doom’s identity and made him live a false life as Tony Stark.

He Who Remains had already fought and defeated Doom in the Multiversal War. Before that, RDJ’s Doom had lived a normal life in his own universe, fought countless battles—including against He Who Remains—and eventually lost.

Then, using the power of Alioth, He Who Remains silenced all timelines—including Doom’s.

To avoid future danger from Doom, he made sure Doom was raised as Tony Stark by Howard and his wife—turned from villain to hero.


So Tony Stark… wasn’t really Tony. He was always Doom. And it was all part of He Who Remains’ manipulation.

This theory also explains why only RDJ can play both Tony and Doom.


Think about it: Kang made Doom into a hero by having him adopted by the Starks. And now, in revenge, Doom will manipulate all the Avengers—turning them from heroes into villains.

It’s poetic justice.

As they say: Villains are not born. They are made.

And in this case, Kang made Doom by hiding his identity and making him live a lie.


Now here’s the biggest twist: why did Marvel start the entire franchise with Iron Man?

Why not Spider-Man or X-Men?

Because, back in the 90s, Marvel was broke. They could only afford the license for Iron Man. They sold off the rest—X-Men to Fox, Spider-Man to Sony.

So when the MCU launched with Iron Man in 2008, they didn’t have access to their most popular heroes.

RDJ turned Iron Man into a global icon—and the rest is history.

Kevin Feige always dreamed of creating a universe where all Marvel characters—Spider-Man, X-Men, Iron Man, and more—coexisted like in the comics.

But they couldn’t do that until recently.


So what happened?

He Who Remains used his powers to silence the original Marvel universe—a universe where Spider-Man, X-Men, Iron Man, and all others coexisted. Then, he created a Secret Timeline—the 616 universe—where:

  • Spider-Man came much later

  • X-Men didn’t exist

  • Doom lived as Tony Stark

This soft reboot is necessary. That’s why Secret Wars is going to reset everything.

After the reboot, the original Marvel Universe will return—with mutants, Spider-Man, Venom, Fantastic Four, Iron Man, Captain America—all together again.


And that, my friends, is what the Marvel reboot is all about.

This theory explains everything: Kang, Doom, X-Men, Spider-Man—they’re all part of it. And after Secret Wars, we’ll finally get the real Marvel Universe back.

The post Avengers Doomsday: How Tony Stark in Dr. Doom? appeared first on Daily Research Plot.

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