I wouldn't have activated the signal if I'd known what would happen next. But I did it in the name of science... and for the cause of progress. As I look up at this supernatural demon bear, I wonder--is progress always the best motivator when we're charting unknown waters? Because progress always leaves blood on the trail... a trail where we can never know the real cost of our actions... until it's too late!
Appearing in 1st story
Featured Characters:
Supporting Characters:
- Crystal Catawnee (First appearance)
Antagonists:
Other Characters:
- Sleep-Stealer (Referenced)
- Hulk (Dr. Bruce Banner) (Referenced)
- Punisher (Frank Castle) (Referenced)
- Venom (Referenced)
- Duncan (First appearance)
- Bird (First appearance)
- Salvador Dalí (Referenced)
- "Mr. Crow" (First appearance)
- Ada (First appearance)
- Leonardo Fibonacci (Mentioned)
- Rick Moranis (Referenced)
Races and Species:
Locations:
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-
-
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- Rose Bowl (First appearance)
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- Joshua Tree National Park (Mentioned)
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- Hell (Invoked)
Items:
- and
Synopsis for 1st story
- Synopsis not yet written
Solicit Synopsis
A revolutionary dark take on Spider-Man begins here!
What is reality and what is dream? What is science and what is magic? At the intersection of all of this stands the Deadly Neighborhood Spider-Man. Peter Parker goes to Los Angeles and what he finds there are definitely not angels. The demons waiting for Peter are going to test him like never before. One demon in particular, a very famous one for Marvel and X fans in particular, might just eat Spider-Man alive.Notes
- A trailer was released by Marvel on YouTube to promote this issue:
Trivia
- The original version of Bengal's connecting variant cover for this issue accidentally included Spinnerette (Heather Brown) from the indie webcomic of the same name, due to the artist having confused her with Spinneret (Mary Jane Watson) from Renew Your Vows and mistakenly assumed she was a Marvel character.[1] When informed of the mistake, Bengal was obligated to remove Spinnerette from the cover despite her creator not being opposed to the unlicensed cameo.[2][3]
See Also
Links and References
References
- ↑ Bengal (September 15, 2022) Bengal on Twitter: "I didn't think anything. I was given references of characters I don't even know to add in the covers.And really then, what surprises me the most is, why would they not ask me to remove it from the cover if it was a mistake? Weird situation." Twitter. Archived from the original on January 1, 2024. Originally retrieved on July 19, 2023.
- ↑ Bengal (September 15, 2022) Bengal on Twitter: "I think this was a honest mistake, all I can do as the artist is remove her, so no profit is made with the character and it should then be fine. Blame the editor for not checking twice or blame me for not reading enough comics I guess! I just don't know most characters in there." Twitter. Archived from the original on January 1, 2024. Originally retrieved on July 19, 2023.
- ↑ KrazyKrow (September 15, 2022) KrazyKrow on Twitter: "Creator of (webcomic) Spinnerette here! Would love nothing more than to see her appear on a Spider-Man cover! Hope this one makes it to print!" Twitter. Archived from the original on January 1, 2024. Originally retrieved on July 19, 2023.