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Ironheart Dislikes Surge as Marvel’s Latest Disney+ Trailer Gets Ratioed on YouTube

May 15, 2025  ·
  Marvin Montanaro
Ironheart Trailer

Ironheart in the trailer for Ironheart - YouTube, Marvel Entertainment

Marvel Studios is facing a wave of backlash as the Ironheart trailer continues to get pummeled with YouTube dislikes. What was meant to be a bold new chapter in the MCU is now shaping up to be one of its most poorly received launches yet.

Ironheart Dislikes on YouTube

The dislike ratio for Ironheart on YouTube as of May 15, 2025 – YouTube, Marvel Entertainment

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As of this writing, the trailer sits at 153,000 likes to 231,000 dislikes, and the gap is only widening. These Ironheart dislikes point to clear fan sentiment as viewers make their dissatisfaction impossible to ignore.

It’s not just a poor showing—it’s a ratio that’s almost on the scale of Disney’s Snow White reboot.

Disney’s New Pattern: Audience Rejection in Real Time

This isn’t the first time a major Disney-backed project has been crushed by viewers before release. Every trailer for Disney’s Snow White starring Rachel Zegler infamously drew anywhere from hundreds of thousands to millions of dislikes, fueling months of controversy over the studio’s approach to legacy properties.

Snow White Trailer 1 views and dislikes

The view count and historic dislike ratio for the first trailer of Disney’s live action Snow White starring Rachel Zegler – YouTube, Disney

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Now, Ironheart appears to be following the same trajectory—only this time, it’s not a remake under fire, but a spin-off series that many fans argue was never earned to begin with.

Marvel has largely ignored the reaction, but the silence is telling. And it hasn’t stopped the studio from doubling down on a marketing campaign that leans heavily on nostalgia while offering little substance.

The RDJ Name-Drop: Desperation or Disrespect?

In a recent feature with Empire, actress Dominique Thorne (Riri Williams) shared a brief encounter she had with Robert Downey Jr., where the former Iron Man actor offered her “two thumbs up.” Marvel is now framing this moment as some kind of symbolic approval—attempting to position Ironheart as a spiritual successor to Iron Man.

But there’s no actual connection.

Iron Man

Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man in Iron Man 2 (2010), Marvel Studios

Tony Stark was long gone by the time Riri entered the picture. The two never met on-screen, never shared a storyline, and have no organic link beyond the fact that both wear armored suits. This “spiritual successor” narrative feels more like marketing than mythos—an attempt to borrow legacy credibility rather than build it.

Marvel used to spend years developing characters before handing over the torch. Now they’re hoping a celebrity nod and a shared tech theme is enough.

The Remarkable Remark Backfires

Thorne also stirred reactions with a quote meant to highlight Riri’s scrappy origins:

“She’s dumpster-diving, whereas Tony Stark [was] this bajillionaire. What she’s able to accomplish is remarkable.”

On the surface, the quote is meant to celebrate Riri’s resourcefulness. But for fans of Tony Stark, it rings hollow. Iron Man’s origin wasn’t about wealth—it was about survival. He built his first suit in a cave, under duress, with shrapnel near his heart. His arc was about responsibility and redemption, not privilege.

Riri Williams

Riri Williams in Ironheart – YouTube, Marvel Entertainment

READ: Marvel’s Ironheart Trailer Drops Same Day as Superman — Fan Reaction Is Brutal as Ironheart Dislikes Explode

The idea that Riri is more “authentic” or “impressive” because she comes from less not only misses the point—it feels like an attempt to diminish what made Stark a compelling and beloved character.

This kind of framing—elevating new heroes by subtly undercutting legacy ones—is becoming a trend at Marvel. And it’s not going over well.

Dumping Half the Show? That’s Not a Good Sign

The Ironheart backlash isn’t just about tone, legacy, or character comparisons. It’s also about strategy.

Riri Williams

Dominique Thorne as Riri Williams in Marvel Studios’ BLACK PANTHER: WAKANDA FOREVER. Photo by Eli Adé. © 2022 MARVEL.

Marvel will release three of the six episodes on premiere day—a tactic many believe is meant to artificially boost “minutes watched” and stem a potential ratings collapse. It’s the same play they used with Echo, another underperforming Disney+ series, and it signals a lack of confidence.

If Ironheart was a sure bet, it would roll out week by week. Instead, Marvel seems to be rushing half the show out the door before fans check out entirely.

Conclusion: Audiences Aren’t Fooled

The surge in Ironheart dislikes is more than just online noise. It’s a clear message from audiences who feel like they’re being sold a product, not a story. The attempt to wrap Riri Williams in Tony Stark’s shadow, inflate hype with empty symbolism, and ignore genuine fan feedback is exactly why trust in Marvel has eroded.

Ironheart

Dominique Thorne as Riri Williams in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022), Marvel Studios

Ironheart was supposed to represent the next generation of Marvel heroes. But if this trailer is any indication, it may represent something else entirely: a studio that no longer listens.

Are you surprised that the Ironheart trailer received this surge of dislikes? Sound off in the comments and let us know!

UP NEXT: Thunderbolts Director Reportedly Tapped to Lead MCU X-Men Reboot

Author: Marvin Montanaro
Marvin Montanaro is the Editor-in-Chief of That Park Place and a seasoned entertainment journalist with nearly two decades of experience across multiple digital media outlets and print publications. He joined That Park Place in 2024, bringing with him a passion for theme parks, pop culture, and film commentary. Based in Orlando, Florida, Marvin regularly visits Walt Disney World and Universal Orlando, offering firsthand reporting and analysis from the parks. He’s also the creative force behind the Tooney Town YouTube channels, where he appears as his satirical alter ego, Marvin the Movie Monster. Montanaro’s insights are rooted in years of real-world reporting and editorial leadership. He can be reached via email at mmontanaro@thatparkplace.com SOCIAL MEDIA: X: http://x.com/marvinmontanaro Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marvinmontanaro Facebook: https://facebook.com/marvinmontanaro Email: mmontanaro@thatparkplace.com
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skinnyelephant

She is so unlikable. Which means they are staying faithful to the comics.
At this point, my biggest shock about Marvel would be if they created a likable kind and loving black female superhero.
I have this lurking suspicion that they portray all black women this way on purpose. They never make then likable.
Genius, strongest, sassiest yes. But never like the characters we fell in love with during good MCU phases.

Arc

At least we have new content in the form of Chat responses, Chat music video is going hit hard