I wanted to start this talkback is because of how "Stark: Disassembled" ended. Both storylines play directly off of each other, so I made it a joint talkback. But the end of the second arc had some pretty major implications for the Iron Man character. And was the most direct response imaginable to everyone that felt Stark was the "villain" in Civil War, and didn't care for his characterization.
I guess the best way to talk about it, for those who did not read it (hey, it states "Spoilers"

) is to recap what happened here.
While Tony Stark was head of S.H.I.E.L.D., he maintained the Superhuman Registration Act. Where did he keep the files for every single registered superhero? In his computer-like brain. And once Norman Osborn came into power after the end of "Secret Invasion," he wanted those files. To keep this from happening, Stark went on the run, and started a process of, essentially, wiping those files clean. Erasing his mind completely.
But, amid all of the running and issues, it didn't go down exactly as planned. Stark was in a coma, trapped inside his own mind. And with the help of Dr. Strange, was able to free himself, and get back to his former glory.
Well, aside from one glaring problem. In the process of all of this brain altering, Stark lost months of memory. Like, everything from "Civil War" forward. Tony has no memory of his part in the superhero war.
Now, this is pretty dang huge. It resets Iron Man to those who were turned off by his portrayal in "Civil War," while not completely resetting his entire history. A very bold move. Personally, I feel that the stories themselves redeemed him, but for those who just read bullet points, this could be for them. It also sets a way for the "Big Three" to rejoin (Thor especially, since he had the biggest problem with Tony
because of his involvement in the war).
And another major thing? They've not addressed it (Heck all of this just happened in Iron Man #24, and that just came out about two weeks ago), and I don't know if ever will, but if Tony's memory is wiped out going back that far, and all of the registration information is post-War, then all of that is gone. It invalidates the entire Civil War. It was fought over Registration, and every registered hero is now anonymous again. The entire slate is wiped clean. Pretty major stuff here.
It was a great story. Both were. But this stuff is a complete game-changer.