Boring, boring, boring. From the laughable flight speed to the shoddy character models to the "phase out" destruction physics, Iron Man 2 is boring in nearly every facet of its visual execution. Iron Man has been reduced to Iron Grandma; if you were hoping to go all Chuck Yeager, too bad. In fact, if you were hoping to be able to go faster than most speed limits, too bad. I can almost understand why the developers did this -- you don't want to be smashing into the environment at every turn. Still, it's like a Spider-Man game without web swinging. The final boss could have been awesome, but the control inconsistencies team up with the horrible camera in a joint effort to make the player seasick.
Iron Man 2 sounds alright. The music and sound effects are worthy of a shrug, but the voice acting is the game's only significant redeeming factor. Don Cheadle and Samuel L. Jackson reprise their roles as James Rhodes/War Machine and Nick Fury. Their performances aren't Riddick-caliber, but they aren't phone-ins, either. Sorry, there's no Robert Downey Jr., but Eric Loomis (an Iron Man veteran) absolutely runs away with the part. The end credits roll to the sound of Lamb of God's "Hit the Wall," and I'm pretty sure I heard some Meshuggah in there, too.