Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Franchise / SpiderMan

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''WesternAnimation/MarvelUniverse''

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/MarvelUniverse''''WesternAnimation/MarvelUniverseDisneyXD''
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[caption-width-right:350:''[[ArcWords With great power comes great responsibility.]]'']]

to:

[[caption-width-right:350:''[[ArcWords With great power power]] comes [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatResponsibility great responsibility.]]'']]

Added: 430

Changed: 369

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[folder:Miscellaneous]]

to:

[[folder:Miscellaneous]][[AC:Miscellaneous]]
[[folder:Unproduced Scripts]]



* ''Anime/MarvelDiskWarsTheAvengers'' (Anime)
* ''Theatre/SpiderManTurnOffTheDark'' (Broadway Musical)
* ''Ride/TheAmazingAdventuresOfSpiderMan'' (Theme Park Ride)
* ''Spider-Man'' (1977), a MadeForTVMovie and {{Pilot}} for ''Series/TheAmazingSpiderMan1978''.
* ''Script/SpiderManJamesCameron'' (Unproduced Film Script)

to:

* ''Anime/MarvelDiskWarsTheAvengers'' (Anime)
''Spider-Man (Roger Corman)''
* ''Theatre/SpiderManTurnOffTheDark'' (Broadway Musical)
''Spider-Man: Operation Z''
* ''Ride/TheAmazingAdventuresOfSpiderMan'' (Theme Park Ride)
''Spider-Man (Tobe Hooper)''
* ''Spider-Man'' (1977), a MadeForTVMovie and {{Pilot}} for ''Series/TheAmazingSpiderMan1978''.
''Spider-Man (Joe Zito)''
* ''Script/SpiderManJamesCameron'' (Unproduced Film Script) ''Spider-Man (Albert Pyun)''
* ''Script/SpiderManJamesCameron''



!!! Literature

to:

!!! Literature[[/folder]]
[[folder:Literature]]



!!! Live-Action TV

to:

!!! Live-Action TV[[/folder]]
[[folder:Live-Action TV]]



!!! Pinballs

to:

!!! Pinballs[[/folder]]
[[folder:Pinballs]]


Added DiffLines:

[[folder:Other]]
[[index]]
* ''Anime/MarvelDiskWarsTheAvengers'' (Anime)
* ''Theatre/SpiderManTurnOffTheDark'' (Broadway Musical)
* ''Ride/TheAmazingAdventuresOfSpiderMan'' (Theme Park Ride)
* ''Spider-Man'' (1977), a MadeForTVMovie and {{Pilot}} for ''Series/TheAmazingSpiderMan1978''.
[[/index]]
[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManLeeAndDitko'' (1963)

to:

* ** ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManLeeAndDitko'' (1963)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Prepping for launch.

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/PeterParkerSpiderMan'' (1999)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' (Vol. 2)


Added DiffLines:

!!!1980s
* ''ComicBook/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' (Vol. 1)
!!!1970s
* ''Peter Parker, ComicBook/TheSpectacularSpiderMan''

Added: 365

Changed: 125

Removed: 188

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Links


* ''Webcomic/SpiderManUnlimited2023'' (September 2023 - present)



* ''ComicBook/MilesMoralesSpiderMan2018'' (December 2018 – September 2022)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2018'' (Vol. 5) (July 2018 - September 2021)

to:

* ''ComicBook/MilesMoralesSpiderMan2018'' (December 2018 – September 2022)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2018'' (Vol. 5) (July 2018 - September 2021)
''Webcomic/SpiderVerseUnlimited2022''



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2018'' (Vol. 5) (July 2018 - September 2021)
* ''ComicBook/MilesMoralesSpiderMan2018'' (December 2018 – September 2022)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963'' (Vol. 1) (1963)

to:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963'' (Vol. 1) (1963)1)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManTheLostHunt'' (2023)



* ''ComicBook/{{Identity Crisis|1998}}'' (1998)

to:

* ''ComicBook/{{Identity Crisis|1998}}'' (1998)''ComicBook/IdentityCrisis1998''



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski'' (2001-2007)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBeyond'' (2021-2022)
* ''ComicBook/DarkWeb'' (2022-2023)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManTheLostHunt'' (2023)
* ''ComicBook/{{Gang War|2023}}'' (2023-2024)

to:

* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBeyond'' (2021-2022)
(2021)
* ''ComicBook/DarkWeb'' (2022-2023)
(2022)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManTheLostHunt'' (2023)
* ''ComicBook/{{Gang War|2023}}'' (2023-2024)
''ComicBook/GangWar2023''


Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/SpiderPunk'' (2022)


Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/EdgeOfSpiderVerse2022''


Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/EdgeOfSpiderVerse2023''

Added: 50

Changed: 154

Removed: 51

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Reorganizing Comics and Storylines


* ''ComicBook/DeadlyNeighborhoodSpiderMan'' (October 2022 - February 2023)

to:

* ''ComicBook/DeadlyNeighborhoodSpiderMan'' (October 2022 - February 2023)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManDanSlott'' (2010-2018)

to:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManDanSlott'' (2010-2018)(2010)



* ''ComicBook/UntoldTalesOfSpiderMan'' (1995-1997)

to:

* ''ComicBook/UntoldTalesOfSpiderMan'' (1995-1997)(1995)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManLeeAndDitko'' (1962-1966)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963'' (Vol. 1) (1963-1998)

to:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManLeeAndDitko'' (1962-1966)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963'' (Vol. 1) (1963-1998)(1963)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManLeeAndDitko'' (1963)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlue'' (2002-2003)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlackCatTheEvilThatMenDo'' (2002-2006)

to:

* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlue'' (2002-2003)
(2002)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlackCatTheEvilThatMenDo'' (2002-2006)(2002)



* ''ComicBook/DeadlyNeighborhoodSpiderMan'' (2022)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2018'' (2018-2021)

Added: 1252

Changed: 611

Removed: 2165

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Reorganizing Comics and Storylines


[[folder:Comic Titles]]

to:

[[folder:Comic Titles]][[folder:Ongoing Series]]



* ''[[ComicBook/SpiderMan2022 Spider-Man]]'' (October 2022 - present)

to:

* ''[[ComicBook/SpiderMan2022 Spider-Man]]'' ''ComicBook/SpiderMan2022'' (October 2022 - present)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBeyond'' (Vol. 5) (October 2021 - March 2022)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManNoir: Eyes Without a Face'' (2010)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderIsland'' (Started August 2011)
* ''ComicBook/ScarletSpider'' (Started January 2012)
* ''ComicBook/SuperiorSpiderMan'' (Started 2013)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2014'' (Started 2014)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderGwen'' (Introduced September 2014, began February 2015)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManAndTheXMen'' (Started December 2014)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2015'' (Started 2015)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManLifeStory'' (Started May 2019)
* ''ComicBook/GhostSpider2019'' (Started August 2019)

to:

* ''ComicBook/SpiderManNoir: Eyes Without a Face'' (2010)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderIsland'' (Started August 2011)
''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManDanSlott'' (2010-2018)
* ''ComicBook/ScarletSpider'' (Started January 2012)
(2012)
* ''ComicBook/SuperiorSpiderMan'' (Started 2013)
(2013)
* ''ComicBook/TheSuperiorFoesOfSpiderMan'' (2013)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2014'' (Started 2014)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderGwen'' (Introduced September 2014, began February 2015)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManAndTheXMen'' (Started December 2014)
(Vol. 3) (2014)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2015'' (Started 2015)
(Vol. 4) (2015)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManLifeStory'' (Started May 2019)
''ComicBook/SpiderManDeadpool'' (2016)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan2016'' (2016)
* ''ComicBook/GhostSpider2019'' (Started August 2019)(2019)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski''. Started in 2001.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlackCatTheEvilThatMenDo''. Series started in August 2002, concluded in 2006.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlue''. Series began in July 2002 and concluded in April 2003.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManLovesMaryJane''. Series started in December, 2005.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManNoir'' (2009)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManReign''. Series started in December, 2006.
* ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan''. Series started in November, 2000.

to:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski''. Started in 2001.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlackCatTheEvilThatMenDo''. Series started in August 2002, concluded in 2006.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManBlue''. Series began in July 2002 and concluded in April 2003.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManLovesMaryJane''. Series started in December, 2005.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManNoir'' (2009)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManReign''. Series started in December, 2006.
* ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan''. Series started in November, 2000.
''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski'' (2001)



* ''ComicBook/ScarletSpider''
* ''ComicBook/SpiderGirl''. First appeared in February, 1998.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan2099''. Series started in November, 1992.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManAndBatmanDisorderedMinds''. Published in September, 1995.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManChapterOne''. Series started December, 1998.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderWoman''
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1999''. Started in 1999.

to:

* ''ComicBook/ScarletSpider''
''ComicBook/UntoldTalesOfSpiderMan'' (1995-1997)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderGirl''. First appeared in February, 1998.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan2099''. Series started in November, 1992.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManAndBatmanDisorderedMinds''. Published in September, 1995.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManChapterOne''. Series started December, 1998.
* ''ComicBook/SpiderWoman''
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1999''. Started in 1999.
''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1999'' (Vol. 2) (1999)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963''. The series began in March 1963 and concluded in November 1998.

to:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963''. The series began in March 1963 and concluded in November 1998.''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManLeeAndDitko'' (1962-1966)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963'' (Vol. 1) (1963-1998)



[[folder:Storylines in the Main 616 Continuity]]

to:

[[folder:Storylines in the Main 616 Continuity]][[folder:Limited Series]]



* ''ComicBook/AmazingFantasyNumber15'' (1962)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManLeeAndDitko'' (1962-1966)
* ''ComicBook/IfThisBeMyDestiny'' (1965)
* ''ComicBook/TheNightGwenStacyDied'' (1973)
* ''ComicBook/{{Secret Wars|1984}}'' (1984)
* ''ComicBook/TheDeathOfJeanDeWolff'' (1985-1986)
* ''ComicBook/KravensLastHunt'' (1987)



* ''ComicBook/MaximumCarnage'' (1993)



* ''ComicBook/TheCloneSaga'' (1994-1996)
* ''ComicBook/UntoldTalesOfSpiderMan'' (1995-1997)
* ''ComicBook/{{Identity Crisis|1998}}'' (1998)
* ''ComicBook/RevengeOfTheGreenGoblin'' (2000-2001)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski'' (2001-2007)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManAndTheXMen'' (2014)
[[/index]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Storylines in the Main 616 Continuity]]
[[index]]
* ''ComicBook/AmazingFantasyNumber15'' (1962)
* ''ComicBook/IfThisBeMyDestiny'' (1965)
* ''ComicBook/TheNightGwenStacyDied'' (1973)
* ''ComicBook/TheDeathOfJeanDeWolff'' (1985-1986)
* ''ComicBook/KravensLastHunt'' (1987)
* ''ComicBook/MaximumCarnage'' (1993)
* ''ComicBook/TheCloneSaga'' (1994-1996)
* ''ComicBook/{{Identity Crisis|1998}}'' (1998)
* ''ComicBook/RevengeOfTheGreenGoblin'' (2000-2001)
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski'' (2001-2007)



* ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}'' (2006-2007)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManDanSlott'' (2010-2018)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderMen'' (2012)



* ''ComicBook/SuperiorSpiderMan''
* ''ComicBook/TheSuperiorFoesOfSpiderMan''
* ''ComicBook/SpiderVerse'' (2014)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManDeadpool'' (2016)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan2016'' (2016)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderMenII'' (2017)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderGeddon'' (2018)



* ''ComicBook/EndOfTheSpiderVerse'' (2022)



* ''ComicBook/SupermanVsTheAmazingSpiderMan'' (1976)



* ''ComicBook/SupermanAndSpiderMan'' (1981)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManAndBatmanDisorderedMinds'' (1995)
** ''ComicBook/BatmanAndSpiderManNewAgeDawning'' (1997)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManIndia2004''



* ''ComicBook/WebWarriors'' (2016)



* ''ComicBook/SpiderManIndia2023''



[[AC: Theatrically Released Films and Western Animation]]

[[folder:Films -- Produced by Sony Pictures]]

to:

[[AC: Theatrically Released Films and Western Animation]]

[[folder:Films -- Produced by Sony Pictures]]
[[folder:Crossovers]]


Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/SupermanVsTheAmazingSpiderMan'' (1976)
* ''ComicBook/SupermanAndSpiderMan'' (1981)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderManAndBatmanDisorderedMinds'' (1995)
* ''ComicBook/BatmanAndSpiderManNewAgeDawning'' (1997)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderMen'' (2012)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderVerse'' (2014)
* ''ComicBook/WebWarriors'' (2016)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderMenII'' (2017)
* ''ComicBook/SpiderGeddon'' (2018)
* ''ComicBook/EndOfTheSpiderVerse'' (2022)
[[/index]]
[[/folder]]

[[AC:Theatrically Released Films and Western Animation]]

[[folder:Films -- Produced by Sony Pictures]]
[[index]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updating Link


* ''ComicBook/SpiderManIdentityCrisis'' (1998)

to:

* ''ComicBook/SpiderManIdentityCrisis'' ''ComicBook/{{Identity Crisis|1998}}'' (1998)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updating Link


* ''ComicBook/GangWar2023'' (2023-2024)

to:

* ''ComicBook/GangWar2023'' ''ComicBook/{{Gang War|2023}}'' (2023-2024)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/DarkWeb'' (2022-2023)


Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/GangWar2023'' (2023-2024)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Links

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2014'' (Started 2014)


Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2015'' (Started 2015)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Link

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1999''. Started in 1999.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updating Link


* ''ComicBook/SinsPast''

to:

* ''ComicBook/SinsPast''''ComicBook/SinsPast'' (2004)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Link

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/SinsPast''
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updating Link


* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManNickSpencer'' (Vol. 5) (July 2018 - September 2021)

to:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManNickSpencer'' ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2018'' (Vol. 5) (July 2018 - September 2021)



* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManNickSpencer'' (2018-2021)

to:

* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManNickSpencer'' ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2018'' (2018-2021)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Link

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/GrimHunt'' (2010)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Links

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/SpiderManVersusWolverine'' (1987)


Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/SpiderManTheMutantAgenda'' (1994)
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Crosswicking

Added DiffLines:

* GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke: Spider-Man's origins have moved from being bit by a [[RadiationInducedSuperpowers radioactive]] spider in the original to being bit by a genetically enhanced "super spider" in ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'', ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'', and both the [[Film/SpiderMan1 original movie]] and [[Film/TheAmazingSpiderMan the reboot]]. The '90s ''[[WesternAnimation/SpiderManTheAnimatedSeries Spider-Man]]'' cartoon actually goes half-way, being bit by a spider that was hit by "neogenic" radiation. The mainstream comics [[ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski eventually]] decide to hint that his powers [[DoingInTheScientist might actually be magic]], which to be fair makes more sense than radiation.
** ''ComicBook/SpiderMan2099'', however, goes fully this way -- Miguel O'Hara is a geneticist who's working on ways to combine man with beast for helpful purposes, but he's drugged with the FantasticDrug Rapture, which affects him on a ''genetic level''. He attempts to cleanse himself of it with a previous version of his DNA, but a jealous co-worker sabotages it, turning him into who we know now.

Added: 70

Changed: 10

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Ride/TheAmazingAdventuresOfSpiderMan'' (Theme Park Ride)[[/index]]

to:

* ''Ride/TheAmazingAdventuresOfSpiderMan'' (Theme Park Ride)[[/index]]Ride)


Added DiffLines:

* ''Script/SpiderManJamesCameron'' (Unproduced Film Script)
[[/index]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updating Formatting


* ComicBook/ScarletSpider

to:

* ComicBook/ScarletSpider''ComicBook/ScarletSpider''

Added: 111

Changed: 4

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Link


* ComicBook/SpiderWoman

to:

* ComicBook/SpiderWoman''ComicBook/SpiderWoman''
!!!1960s
* ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963''. The series began in March 1963 and concluded in November 1998.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Adding Link

Added DiffLines:

* ''ComicBook/IfThisBeMyDestiny'' (1965)

Added: 84

Changed: 109

Removed: 129

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Alphabatizing


* [[AbortedArc/SpiderMan Aborted Arc]]
* [[AbusiveParents/SpiderMan Abusive Parents]]



* [[AbortedArc/SpiderMan Aborted Arc]]
* [[AbusiveParents/SpiderMan Abusive Parents]]
* [[AndTheFandomRejoiced/SpiderMan And The Fandom Rejoiced]]
* [[CharacterizationMarchesOn/SpiderMan Characterization Marches On]]

to:

* [[AbortedArc/SpiderMan Aborted Arc]]
* [[AbusiveParents/SpiderMan Abusive Parents]]
* [[AndTheFandomRejoiced/SpiderMan And The Fandom Rejoiced]]
Rejoiced]]
* [[CharacterizationMarchesOn/SpiderMan Characterization Marches On]] On]]

Added: 363

Changed: 15844

Removed: 49283

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:



* TenMinuteRetirement: Inverted in the mid-90's story "Peter Parker No More", in which Spider-Man suffers a mental breakdown after one emotional hit too many, and decides to all but give up his civilian identity, spending all his time in costume.
* ActionSeries: One of the most well-known bits of escapist fiction to date, and no doubt one of the most flagrant examples of the trope.
* AdaptationPersonalityChange: Future retellings, across several mediums, of Peter’s days just short of becoming Spider-Man have made him a more pure-hearted person from the get-go, while also making him far more willing to forgive and work with his former enemies after becoming Spider-Man. However, in the original Stan Lee and Steve Ditko run, it was quite evident that Peter was more of an irritable teenager, a good guy yes, but not an ideal pure hero, which gave weight to Peter’s immediate decision of trying to make money as soon as he got super powers instead of trying to be a hero right away; it was only after much hard-earned experiences that Peter grew to be up a fantastically heroic person.
* AlliterativeName: Creator/StanLee, Spidey's creator, was the TropeCodifier for the trend, because he found names easier to keep track of if he used alliteration as a mnemonic. Examples include: Betty Brant, Curt Connors, Spencer Smythe, Glory Grant, J. Jonah Jameson, John Jameson, Otto Octavius, Peter Parker, Randy Robertson. Randy's father Joe might also count, since his nickname is "Robbie".
* AnimalMotifs: Spidey and a good portion of his {{rogues gallery}}, to wit: the Vulture, the Chameleon, the Scorpion, the Rhino, the Beetle, the Jackal, Dr. Octopus. Likewise, Kraven the Hunter, while not having animal powers famously wears a jacket made out of lion fur. Sometimes {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in stories such as ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski'', and other times deliberately invoked in-universe with Scorpion, who received his powers and codename so he could hunt Spider-Man: in real life, scorpions prey on spiders.
* AnimalThemedFightingStyle: The hero's rogues gallery contains several enemies who follow this pattern to go with their animal motifs. In fact, for a time this was almost the only type of foe Spidey fought. Rhino, Vulture, Doctor Octopus, Kangaroo, Scorpion, Leap Frog, Puma, and Razorback are a very short list of villains who, through one method or another, tend to fight using the same kinds of attacks and tactics as the animals they're patterned after. How effective this is varies.

to:

\n* TenMinuteRetirement: Inverted in the mid-90's story "Peter Parker No More", in which Spider-Man suffers a mental breakdown after one emotional hit too many, and decides to all but give up his civilian identity, spending all his time in costume.\n* ActionSeries: One of the most well-known bits of escapist fiction to date, and no doubt one of the most flagrant examples of the trope.\n* AdaptationPersonalityChange: Future retellings, across several mediums, of Peter’s days just short of becoming Spider-Man have made him a more pure-hearted person from the get-go, while also making makeing him far more willing to forgive and work with his former enemies after becoming Spider-Man. However, in the original Stan Lee and Steve Ditko run, it was quite evident that Peter was more of an irritable teenager, a good guy yes, but not an ideal pure hero, which gave weight to Peter’s immediate decision of trying to make money as soon as he got super powers instead of trying to be a hero right away; it was only after much hard-earned experiences that Peter grew to be up a fantastically heroic person.
* AlliterativeName: Creator/StanLee, Spidey's creator, TheAdjectivalSuperhero: The ''Amazing''/''Spectacular''/''Sensational'' ''Spider-Man'', although Spidey himself prefers to use "Your ''Friendly Neighborhood'' Spider-Man" (which was eventually used as a book title itself). He may well have been the TropeCodifier for this, as his first appearance was in ''Amazing Fantasy'', which was soon after [[SpotlightStealingSquad canceled, and replaced]] on the trend, because newsstands with ''Amazing Spider-Man''.
** When improvising a costume out of a borrowed Fantastic Four costume and [[BrownBagMask a mask out of a paper bag]],
he found names easier to keep track of if he used alliteration as a mnemonic. Examples include: Betty Brant, Curt Connors, Spencer Smythe, Glory Grant, J. Jonah Jameson, John Jameson, Otto Octavius, Peter Parker, Randy Robertson. Randy's father Joe might became the ''Amazing'' or the ''Bombastic'' Bag-Man.
** He is
also count, since his nickname is "Robbie".
* AnimalMotifs: Spidey and a good portion of his {{rogues gallery}}, to wit:
the Vulture, the Chameleon, the Scorpion, the Rhino, the Beetle, the Jackal, Dr. Octopus. Likewise, Kraven the Hunter, ''Avenging'' Spider-Man while not a member of the Avengers, and the ''Fantastic'' Spider-Man while a member of the Fantastic Four.
** When ComicBook/{{Venom}} acted as him during Dark Reign as a member of the ''Dark Avengers'', he was called the ''Sinister'' Spider-Man. ''Sinister'' has also been applied to ComicBook/{{Silk}} as she drifts towards a FaceHeelTurn.
** The ''Superior'' Spider-Man is ComicBook/DoctorOctopus
having animal powers famously wears a jacket made out of lion fur. Sometimes {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in stories such as ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski'', and other times deliberately invoked in-universe hijacked Peter's body.
** When [[spoiler:ComicBook/{{Blade}}]] [[ComicBook/MightyAvengers needed to hide his identity]],
with Scorpion, who received the help of a BlandNameProduct Spider-Man outfit from a costume shop, he became the ''Splendiferous'' Spider Hero. [[BroughtToYouByTheLetterS With "Spider Hero" written across his powers chest.]] The Superior Spider-Man [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments was not amused]].
** ComicBook/SpiderGirl also eventually inherited ''Amazing''
and codename so he could hunt Spider-Man: in real life, scorpions prey on spiders.
* AnimalThemedFightingStyle:
later ''Spectacular'' from her dad.
**
The hero's rogues gallery contains several enemies who follow this pattern ''Radioactive'' ComicBook/SpiderGwen ([[ComicBook/{{Doom}} That can't]] [[WebVideo/AtopTheFourthWall be good!]]).
** ComicBook/MilesMorales is often referred
to go with their animal motifs. In fact, for a time this was almost the only type of foe Spidey fought. Rhino, Vulture, Doctor Octopus, Kangaroo, Scorpion, Leap Frog, Puma, and Razorback are a very short list of villains who, through one method or another, tend to fight using the same kinds of attacks and tactics as the animals they're patterned after. How effective this is varies.''Ultimate'' Spider-Man, referring to his original book, to distinguish him from Parker.



** A ComicBook/SpiderWoman cartoon, courtesy of Creator/DepatieFrelengEnterprises, aired from 1979-1980.

to:

** A ComicBook/SpiderWoman cartoon, ''WesternAnimation/SpiderWoman'', courtesy of Creator/DepatieFrelengEnterprises, aired from 1979-1980.



** ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManAndHisAmazingFriends'', which aired around the same time as the above series, saw the webhead team up with ComicBook/{{Iceman|MarvelComics}} and [[CanonImmigrant Firestar]], and is much better-known nowadays.

to:

** ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManAndHisAmazingFriends'', which aired around the same time as the above series, saw the webhead team up with ComicBook/{{Iceman|MarvelComics}} Iceman and [[CanonImmigrant Firestar]], Firestar, and is much better-known nowadays.



** ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' is the first animated Spider-Man series to focus his time as a teenager in high school, as it was originally in the comics. The show is also widely considered an AdaptationDistillation as it stays true to the comics (through using a lot of elements from the original Spider-Man comics that were written by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko; the show brought in characters, storylines, and plot elements with a similar balance of action, drama and comedy as well as a high school setting) in addition to utilizing material from all eras of the comic's run and other sources such as the more recent the ''Comicbook/UltimateSpiderMan'' comics and the [[Film/SpiderManTrilogy Sam Raimi movies]], making a Spider-Man cartoon that is very popular and recognizable to both older and younger fans.

to:

** ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' is the first animated Spider-Man series to focus his time as a teenager in high school, as it was originally in the comics. The show is also widely considered an AdaptationDistillation as it stays true to the comics (through using a lot of elements from the original Spider-Man comics that were written by Stan Lee Creator/StanLee and Steve Ditko; the show brought in characters, storylines, and plot elements with a similar balance of action, drama and comedy as well as a high school setting) in addition to utilizing material from all eras of the comic's run and other sources such as the more recent the ''Comicbook/UltimateSpiderMan'' comics and the [[Film/SpiderManTrilogy Sam Raimi movies]], making a Spider-Man cartoon that is very popular and recognizable to both older and younger fans.



* ArachnidAppearanceAndAttire: Spider-Man is a notable example for being very colorful. Except when he's wearing his black costume. Notably, while Spider-Man is usually joking, laughing, and having a good time while fighting bad guys, when he ''stops'' quipping and gets serious, pissed, or seriously pissed, he becomes an absolutely ''terrifying'' opponent. When Peter's the "Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man," he defies this trope. When he drops the "friendly" part, he pretty much codifies it.
** There's also ComicBook/{{Venom}}, Carnage, and Toxin as symbiotes that copy Spidey's powers, and the various [[ComicBook/SpiderWoman Spider-Women]].
** Madame Web also counts.
** Lesser known Spider-Man foes include Tarantula, and Black Tarantula.
** The two [[ComicBook/ScarletSpider Scarlet Spiders]], both clones of the original Spider-Man.
** ''ComicBook/SpiderGwen'' and ''ComicBook/{{Silk}}'' as well.
* ArchEnemy: Three villains contest for the role: ComicBook/GreenGoblin, ComicBook/DoctorOctopus, and {{ComicBook/Venom}}. The reason for this is that the Green Goblin died in the '70s and spent a good 20-odd years dead before he came back to torment his foe, which is probably the record to beat for dead A-list villains. In the meantime, Doctor Octopus and Venom filled the roles in the '70s and '80s/'90s, respectively. However, in recent decades, Venom became more of an AntiHero figure with his hatred of Peter toned down. At the same time, both Osborn and Octavius really hurt the wall-crawler in their own nasty ways, so if there is a contest for a mantle of Spider-Man’s greatest enemy, it’s between these two. As Stan Lee put it himself: ''"The Green Goblin is Peter Parker's greatest enemy, while Doctor Octopus is Spider-Man's greatest enemy.”''
** To elaborate on the quote: Doctor Octopus is the archenemy of Spider-Man in a very classic sense. Otto and Peter have [[MirrorCharacter a lot in common]], [[MadScientist both]] [[ScienceHero being scientists,]] [[FriendlessBackground who were bullied in school,]] and later got caught up in [[FreakLabAccident freak accidents]] that dramatically changed them forever. Both received a lot of power and both decided to channel that power by adopting an alter-ego based on eight-legged animal. The difference is that Peter chose to be a superhero and [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatResponsibility use his powers for good,]] while Otto chose to become a criminal, [[DrunkWithPower who tries to get back at the world.]] Doctor Octopus is the most recurring villain of the franchise, challenging the very idea of Spider-Man and being responsible for some of the most dramatic incidents in Peter’s career as a superhero: his first defeat, near death, death of Captain Stacey, establishment of Sinister Six and outright [[GrandTheftMe identity theft.]] At the same time, Otto never really cared about the man behind the mask and kept his rivalry with Spider-Man on sort of [[AffablyEvil “gentlemanly”]] level, actually making a point of trying not to hurt Peter’s loved ones.
** ComicBook/NormanOsborn is a different story. For him, being a supervillain with a [[SecretIdentity secret identity]] has never really carried any pragmatic benefits and has not served any goal aside from channeling his psychopathic and sadistic urges while maintaining a [[VillainWithGoodPublicity façade of respectful businessman]]. Since his very motivation as the Goblin (and later as Osborn himself) is to play out power fantasies, he was angry that someone stood up against him and swiftly decided to [[EvilIsPetty punish the person behind the mask]]. This dynamic between the characters eventually led to a lot of tragedy and pain in Peter’s life over the years as he saw [[RevengeByProxy numerous deaths and tortures of his loved ones]], starting with [[ComicBook/TheNightGwenStacyDied Gwen Stacy]], at the hands of Norman. Needless to say that it’s a [[ItsPersonal very personal]] conflict between the two and that Peter hates no one as much as he hates Osborn. He even had to [[ThouShaltNotKill stop himself from killing the latter]] several times. If Otto challenges the idea of Spider-Man as a superhero, Norman Osborn challenges Peter’s morality itself.
* TheArtifact: On account of Marvel's decision to set Spider-Man in a LikeRealityUnlessNoted New York (rather than DC's FantasyCounterpartCulture approach) as well as its adoption of ComicBookTime, some aspects of Spider-Man's lore has become a little anachronistic or dated (which only [[ReimaginingTheArtifact recently has started to change]]).
** Spider-Man is fundamentally a street-level superhero like Daredevil and originally his adventures had a realism because TheSixties to TheNineties was TheBigRottenApple era of New York City (where real events like the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City_blackout_of_1977 1977 blackout]] occurred in the page), a time of high crime statistics where the idea of multiple street-level superheroes in a single city had a little verisimilitude. Since the era of Giuliani and gentrification however, street crime level has dropped down while highly restrictive gun laws have been put into effect. Now of course the presence and activity of supervillains does not depend on that for explanations, but fundamentally the reduction of crime should mean that Spider-Man's status as a street-level hero being so important as to make demands on his personal and professional life need more justification than "[[BrooklynRage it's New York]]".
** The issue of gentrification and high costs in New York, and the challenge to the print media by online and the rise of cellphones and the internet has also meant that Peter's old job as a photographer for a newspaper and being the guy who "takes pictures of Spider-Man" and making a sufficient living off of that (despite being paid low by JJJ) and still living in New York, makes it harder to accept. It was already dated in TheOughties that Creator/SamRaimi's adoption of the same came off to more than a few observers as AnachronismStew (and Raimi made it work by artificially mixing different aspects of New York history in his film). In the ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' series, Peter becomes a web designer (albeit initially entering the Daily Bugle with the photographs) and part of the plot had the Daily Bugle transition from a print to an online magazine. Creator/DanSlott's run had Jameson become the Mayor of New York which essentially updated their dynamic.
** [[invoked]]Likewise, the idea of "Peter taking pictures of Spider-Man" which is a beloved trope and central to his dynamic of JJJ suffers because TechnologyMarchesOn. In TheSixties through TheEighties, when all photography was done on film and professional photographs were shot manually with analog controls (i.e. selecting f-stop, exposure, ISO with fingers and in-camera in the middle of a shot), it was believable that a superhero like Spider-Man would be too fast to capture and needed an insider as it were to provide the pictures, which made it possible for Peter to gain exclusive rights to Spider-Man's still photographs. But this made it harder with the digital revolution and impossible in the smartphone age, as such the trope started fading in comics in TheNineties and TheOughties and has disappeared in TheNewTens.
** Ben and May Parker in the comics belonged to "the Greatest Generation" and Ben was several years older than Richard, his younger brother (who is Peter's father). This kind of background made sense in that time owing to the trials of the Depression, the war years (Ben was a serviceman) and the generation gap, but after adopting ComicBookTime, both Ben and May became older as Peter grew younger, making it more of a stretch, leading to recent comics to try and write May into a younger person. Ultimate Ben and May were given a SettingUpdate from Greatest Generation to baby boomers (specifically ex-hippies) for this reason.
* ArtifactDomination:
** When Spider-Man first came into possession of his symbiotic costume he was unaware that it was a living entity. The symbiote, coming from a fairly violent species, slowly twisted Spidey into a more violent version of himself until he realized what was going on and got rid of it. Several other symbiotes exist in the Marvel Universe and the symbiote is a danger to take over its host. However most of these symbiotes have found sympathetic hosts, so it's not known how much influence they exert or how much is the host's own appetite for destruction.
** After leaving Spider-Man the first symbiote found Eddie Brock whose own hatred of Spider-Man and violent temper were a better fit.
** Another symbiote found violent serial killer Cletus Kasady and became Carnage, a mass-murdering supervillain.
** After Eddie Brock rejected the symbiote, he auctioned it off to Don Fortunato who gives it to his under-achieving son Angelo, hoping the power of the symbiote will finally make him into something. However when Angelo becomes frightened of his newfound power and refuses to kill a weakened Spider-Man, the symbiote abandons him.
** Agent Venom (Flash Thompson) is only allowed to wear the suit for 48 hours at a time precisely so it cannot take control of his mind.
* AscendedExtra: [[ClothesMakeTheSuperman Flash Thompson is the current host of Venom,]] [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman since S.H.I.E.L.D. decided that just the Venom symbiote EXISTING]] [[SealedEvilInACan made him the greatest threat on Earth]].
* AuthorAvatar:
** Creator/StanLee has said that Spider-Man was something of this for him. He also created J. Jonah Jameson based on other peoples' view of him, and as the EIC, Lee had a similar job as Jonah at Marvel. Both he and Ditko were children during the Depression and grew up with memories of poverty and having a hard luck life, which fed into the portrayal of poor working-class Peter, and the portrayal of Aunt May and Uncle Ben as Greatest Generation parental figures based on their memories of their families.
** Since Ditko drew and designed the comics as per the Marvel Method, some argue that Peter is more reflective of Ditko himself. The original [[http://www.lostonwallace.com/ditko.jpg Peter Parker]] in the comics bears a startling resemblance to Steve Ditko in his high school picture. Like Peter, Ditko was a loner, an outsider, a little aloof though also described as friendly and affable in one-on-one meetings, which mirrored the early Peter Parker to a great degree.
* AxCrazy: Carnage, Venom to an extent. And Green Goblin who should never be left out.
* BadButt: Venom and Carnage in the '90s cartoon, so so much...
-->'''Cletus Kassidy:''' [[NeverSayDie I'd eat you for breakfast.]]\\
'''Eddie Brock:''' [[ThreatBackfire Oh yeah,]] [[RegretEatingMe well, I'd give you indigestion...]] [[LameComeback man.]]
* BatPeople:
** Batwing is a young boy who was exposed to [[ToxicWasteCanDoAnything toxic waste]] in Carlsbad Caverns, causing him to become bat-like. Despite his monstrous appearance, he's still just a child, and Spider-Man tries to protect him from those who hate and fear him.
** ComicBook/{{Morbius}} is an AntiVillain who became a [[OurVampiresAreDifferent genetically modified vampire]], with bat genes and an [[LooksLikeOrlok Orlok-like appearance]]. However, in some appearance -- like in an ''ComicBook/{{Exiles}}'' story arc and in [[WesternAnimation/SpiderManTheAnimatedSeries animated]] [[WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan2012 series]] -- he was transformed into a half-man half-bat monster, seeing more like an anthropomorphic bat with wings.
* BigApplesauce: While UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity is home for a lot of Marvel superheroes, this is ''his'' Neighborhood where he does his Friendly stuff. While he can battle the cosmic fights like ComicBook/FantasticFour, the global fights like ComicBook/TheAvengers, and the mystic fights like ComicBook/DoctorStrange, Spidey will ''always'' be seen webslinging across the Manhattan skyline.
* BigBrotherMentor: ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} has been this to Spider-Man from time to time. Overlaps with HeterosexualLifePartners. Likewise originally Johnny Storm.
* BootstrappedTheme: The theme song for the 1967 cartoon is one for the franchise as a whole. Covers for it and variations appeared in ''Film/SpiderManTrilogy'' and a full orchestral symphonic opening for ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming''. It's also a popular standard covered by Music/TheRamones and Music/{{Aerosmith}} among others.
* BraggingThemeTune: Sing along, kids! ''Spider-Man, Spider-Man, does whatever a spider can. Spins a web, any size. Catches thieves, just like flies. Look out! Here comes the Spider-Man.''
* BrieferThanTheyThink:
** Spider-Man's origins as a KidHero in high school are given a huge amount of emphasis in the character's portrayal in various media, including recent movies and animated series. Considering this was one of the things that originally made him so unique and relatable, it makes sense to a degree. However, Peter actually graduated from high school and went to college (the fictitious Empire State University) in Issue 28 of the Lee[=/=]Ditko ''Amazing'' run -- only two and a half years after his first appearance. The classic period of Spider-Man as WakeUpGoToSchoolSaveTheWorld lasted a very short time indeed, and most of his comic exploits from then on were as an early 20s young man, with it taking ''thirteen'' years for him to graduate college. Adaptations tend to emphasize the high school element to the degree that it has arguably become LostInImitation. Brian Michael Bendis took this to the logical extreme in the ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' comics, where 200+ issues were written and completed over a span of a decade without Peter or his class graduating from high school. Meanwhile, the recent Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse films feature the webhead being played by Tom Holland, the youngest actor yet to play Spider-Man, and he's still in high school as of his seventh movie appearance (three of those being solo films) and 6 years of real-time.
** The BettyAndVeronica LoveTriangle between Peter Parker, Gwen Stacy, and Mary Jane Watson that everyone remembers was actually ''very'' short, only lasting a few issues (44-52) before Peter settled on Gwen and Mary Jane became BetaCouple with Harry Osborn, though she would still flirt with Peter and make passes at him later on, which Gwen usually replied with cutting barbs. Her teasing and flirting dialed down when she realized his commitment to Gwen was serious and then MJ was PutOnABus returning semi-regularly from Issue 87 where her dynamic with Gwen was closer to VitriolicBestBuds or "frenemies".
** The alien costume period. Spider-Man started wearing the black costume in 1984 and wore it until 1988 and it is immortalized in notable stories like "The Death of Jean [=DeWolff=]" and "Kraven's Last Hunt," cementing it in fans' minds as a long term thing. But in all of those stories the costume was actually cloth. The actual alien costume was first worn in #252 and was removed in #258 before making a one-issue return in ''Web of Spider-Man #1''. In fact, by the time the issue of ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'' showing how he got the costume was published he had already ditched the costume and was using the cloth copy.
* ButtMonkey:
** Some writers seem to think that the biggest appeal of Spider-Man is that things constantly go wrong for him. As a result, we get countless stories of Peter suffering humiliation, lack of money, sickly aunt, girl trouble, and just all around unpleasantness, to the point that reading the stories can actually get a little depressing. Note that after John Romita Sr. started working on the title with Creator/StanLee, the book became much LighterAndSofter than it had been recently, a move which led most fans to label it as the golden age of Spider-Man.
** J. Jonah Jameson, the Shocker, the Jason Macendale Hobgoblin, and others have all shared this role at different times over the years.
* CallItKarma: J. Jonah Jameson's attempts to capture and destroy Spider-Man have given him no end of grief over the years.
* CanonDiscontinuity: A one-off special on child abuse revealing that Peter had been sexually abused.
* CapitalismIsBad: While not an aesop that Creator/StanLee[[note]]Creator of ''ComicBook/IronMan'' as specifically a good-guy capitalist after seeing Marvel's general anti-establishment trend and seeking to balance it[[/note]] and certainly not Creator/SteveDitko[[note]]An Objectivist with right-wing views though Ditko's tracts often wax more on the self-righteous idealism rather than Rand's economic ideas[[/note]] intended, the overall subtext of Spider-Man as a working-class aspiring scholarship boy does tend to highlight how important a role class plays in his life, and the stories by later writers also play this up:
** In the Lee-Ditko era, wealthy characters are shown as being jerks of some kind or other (Harry Osborn, Gwen Stacy, J. Jonah Jameson, Norman Osborn) with the only exceptions being academics and professionals (such as the doctor who operates Aunt May in "if this be my destiny..." who makes it clear that he sees Peter as [[TheRealHeroes a real hero]] compared to [[DramaticIrony Spider-Man]]). This got played down in the Lee-Romita era where Peter has friendly relations with the Osborns, romances Gwen and befriends her father George Stacy, but even then, and especially when Gerry Conway came on board, Peter is presented as a foil for Harry, the poor up-and-coming kid as opposed to the rich kid who is nothing without his father's name and inheritance, which leads him to turn to drugs to cope with his insecurity.
** A number of Spider-Man's villains over the years tend to be wealthy types, such as the Kingpin, Norman Osborn, and Roderick Kingsley. In ''Marvel Knights Spider-Man'', Norman Osborn mocks Peter with classist insults, for being a loser who works as a high-school teacher despite his great talent, which Spider-Man retorts by pointing out that Norman could well have cured cancer with all his wealth and connections if he actually cares about improving lives. Norman then replies that he only said it to hurt Peter by his values, because he on the other hand as he puts it, "I don't give a rat's ass".
** ''Ultimate Spider-Man'' takes this further (on account of Bendis being a more liberal figure than either Lee or Ditko were). Uncle Ben and Aunt May are ex-hippies with May still proud of her arrest record over a protest. When Peter tells Aunt May that Norman Osborn is a bad guy, Aunt May quotes Ben about how every rich person he knew acquired it illegally. A number of Peter's enemies, such as the Shocker, are StarvingStudent whose work was hijacked by corporations, the Kingpin owns Spider-Man's intellectual property and can buy his way out of a video showing him killing a man, and likewise Peter's own father Richard Parker had his life's work (the Venom suit intended to cure cancer) defunded and complicated because corporations wanted to make it into weapons.
** An interesting example of this trope is how writers tackle the idea of a successful Peter Parker. The earliest instances of Peter Parker as an industrialist was in an alternate timeline in ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManTheAnimatedSeries'' and ''VideoGame/SpiderManEdgeOfTime'' and in both instances the two wealthy Parkers were shown as jerks and bad guys, as is the Peter from ''House of M''. Dan Slott had Otto Octavius hack Peter's body and develop Parker Industries as an AntiHeroSubstitute which the revived Peter Parker ended up running as a HonestCorporateExecutive albeit one so honest that he ended up dismantling his company when a virus threatened the world. Nick Spencer who followed Slott, has Peter ruminate about the ethics of grappling a position of unearned wealth and the consequences of Peter accepting Ock's status-quo on a silver platter, cementing the idea that the richer Peter gets, the less pure he becomes.
* CentralTheme:
** "With great power, there must also come --great responsibility". What it means to have power and to use it in a socially and morally responsible way.
** Your actions and choices have consequences, including the ones you didn't intend or expect, and you have to live with them whether you like it or not, and whether it was your fault or not.
** Everyone has some kind of secret, either a big one or a small one, and there's always more to people than you assume. Just as the world assumes little of Peter Parker and Spider-Man, Peter himself often underestimates or misjudges people around him.
** You have to work for every thing in your life, whether it's your job, your superhero calling, your marriage, your relationships. People are complicated, messy and demanding, and you have to be there for them and make things work and never take people for granted.
* TheChosenMany: According to Araña's series and the ''The Other'', ''Grim Hunt'', ''Spider Island'', and ''Spider-Verse'' arcs, Peter is one of a group of arachnid-themed super-powered individuals empowered by a mystical force called the Web of Life, and is ''the'' [[TheChosenOne Champion]] of the totemic spider deity behind the Web of Life, succeeding Ezekiel Sims and to be succeeded by Anya Corizon in the event he turns evil.
* CloseOnTitle: "The Night That Gwen Stacy Died" does not show its title and splash panel until the last page, in order to prevent readers from finding out too early which ''Spider-Man'' character Marvel decided to kill off.
* ClothesMakeTheSuperman: The Vulture, Shocker, The Rhino, Mysterio, technically Doctor Octopus. Subsequently, Venom and the other symbiotes.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Mary Jane, in her earliest appearances, and her ridiculous lingo. It was the 1960's, but nobody ever talked like that, ''ever''. Nobody outside a straitjacket, anyways...
** White Rabbit is another example of this trope.
* ComingOfAgeStory: In nearly all his incarnations:
** Comics scholars generally see Amazing Fantasy #15 to Amazing Spider-Man #149 (the Lee-Ditko, Lee-Romita, and Conway-Romita era) as an extended coming of age saga where Peter Parker gets superpowers at age 15, briefly uses them for profit, then after failing to help stop a criminal who later kills his Uncle Ben, making him commit so becoming a Superhero and learn responsibility by becoming the caretaker and provider for his Aunt May, working for a living, and going to high school at the same time. The "Master Planner" arc was the period in which Peter ended his youth and became a college-going young adult, he would later form a serious relationship with Gwen Stacy before additional tragedy ends up leading to a [[InnocenceLost loss of innocence]], where his adult social circle is marked by tragedy and broken friendships (Gwen and Harry respectively). Most notably, Conway's final issue in his run, Issue 149, has Peter finally passing his [[SexAsARiteOFPassage rite of passage]] [[spoiler:when it ends with what is strongly implied to be him and MJ having sex together, finally losing his virginity and becoming a man]].
** Adaptations tend to follow similar beats even when it is restricted to selected periods (his high school period and occassionally but rarely his college). Modern versions such as Ultimate Marvel and the MCU has Spider-Man trying to go from small steps hero to a bigger kind of hero working for the Ultimates or the Avengers.
* TheCommissionerGordon: One of the things that set Spider-Man apart was the fact that he never really had a FriendOnTheForce unlike Batman did or the support of the press that Superman did, which made his superhero[=/=]civilian life balance literal murder many times over. That said there were figures who did play this role for Spider-Man but they never lasted long:
** Captain George Stacy was the first character who really played this role for Spider-Man in the comics. He was friendly and tried to play down some of Peter's issues with authority. Then he dies and while George Stacy in his deathbed revealed he was Peter's SecretSecretKeeper and approved of him, his death ended up making Spider-Man look bad within the police force and in the eyes of Gwen (who blamed him for her father's death).
** Captain Jean [=DeWolff=] was the other major character who tried to be this for Spider-Man. But then her death left another vacuum in his eyes.
** Most recently, there's Captain Yuri Watanabe, who dons the identity of Wraith and becomes a vigilante in her own right.
* ConceptsAreCheap: In lesser stories, "With Great Power ComesGreatResponsibility" becomes this. It was never really Peter's BadassCreed as later comics and adaptations made it out to be. It was just a caption voiced by the narrator in ''Amazing Fantasy #15'' in classic Creator/StanLee dated PurpleProse. But the attempt to make this Spider-Man's ethos often leads to much fuzziness about what powers and responsibilities means, leading to much InformedAttribute.
* CrapsackWorld: This has been a hallmark of Peter Parker's life for a very long time, although it's perhaps a little more realistic than most depictions when Peter occasionally catches a break every now and again. CharacterDevelopment would later show that life was no picnic for many of Peter's supporting cast members and even some of his villains. In general whenever a new writing team takes over there's always some shakeup to the status-quo or other and then another that follows when the next one takes over and so on.
* CriticalPsychoanalysisFailure: Stan Lee and Marcos Martin's non-canon story "Identity Crisis" (not to be confused with the in-canon 616 story of the same name), has Spider-Man going to a psychologist Dr. Gray Madder (a pun on gray matter) and talking to him about his identity issues, which involve the constant changes and endless retcons to his supporting cast and rogues, such as his Aunt May being alive and dead, his marriage to MJ being retconned in and out, her being pregnant and not, Green Goblin dying and coming back, {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing the bizarre changes to Spider-Man continuity that actually drives Dr. Gray Madder nuts and has ''him'' going to a shrink.
* CrossOver: With ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}''. [[http://scans-daily.dreamwidth.org/3546489.html And it is glorious.]]
* CutLexLuthorACheck: Doctor Octopus, the Green Goblin, the Shocker, and Mysterio all invent remarkable inventions that could have earned them large fortunes if they'd used them legitimately. Later subverted by the Sandman, who becomes sick of crime and tries to go straight. He eventually wound up using his powers working for the government of [[{{Ruritania}} Symkaria]] under Silver Sable. Spider-Man himself would also end up working for Sable for a little while after she offered him $1,000 a day to do so. Also subverted when Spider-Man actually tries to sell his web formula to a chemical company, only for the executives to reject the offer. Further subverted when Spider-Man saves a banker/stock-broker who cuts [[BornLucky Spider-Man]] a check -- only for a bank-teller to deny the check since [[SpannerInTheWorks Spider-Man has no identification.]]
** Osborn is a very good example of this trope, as it is often lampshaded--most notably by the Hobgoblin--that he could be several magnitudes wealthier if he just marketed his stuff, which would give him a lot of the power he is after anyway. It's explained and {{justified|Trope}} by the fact that Osborn is crazy.
* DaEditor: J. Jonah Jameson, who is probably the most famous example of this trope ''by far'' -- even serving as its page image.
* DeadpanSnarker:
** Spider-Man normally makes YouFightLikeACow remarks, which never fails to piss off his enemies -- and he very well knows this.
** Venom too, though he's much more of a LargeHam spewing out BlackComedy.
* DeathByOriginStory: Uncle Ben. His murder is what makes Spider-Man decide to become a crimefighter.
* DeceasedParentsAreTheBest: Peter's parents were agents of [[ComicBook/NickFury S.H.I.E.L.D.]] and once saved ComicBook/{{Wolverine}}'s life. Likewise, Uncle Ben was a World War II veteran and a great Dad.
* DeliveryNotDesired: Peter records a message to the deceased Gwen Stacy, reflecting on his time with her and explaining she's the reason he's always a bit blue around Valentine's Day. When his wife Mary Jane hears him, rather than be upset that he's talking to his lost love, she understands and asks him to say hello for her.
* DistaffCounterpart: At last count, Spider-Man has had no less than five of them, including [[ComicBook/SpiderGirl his own daughter]]. Unlike most versions, none of them had any major connections to Peter and stood on their own. In fact, in an odd inversion, when the second Comicbook/SpiderWoman was introduced in ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'', the Marvel EIC at the time wanted him to have a black costume similar to hers. Thus, the black costume was made, leading to the creation of Venom years later. Some of the villains would get this too, including Sandman and the Scorpion.
* DistressedDamsel: All of Spider-Man's girlfriends and love interests at some point or another. Gwen Stacy is most famous for the fact that Spider-Man didn't save her. MJ, on the other hand, often fights like a wildcat when someone non-superpowered tries to grab her.
* DontTellMama: The original Green Goblin uses his last words to beg Parker not to tell his son about who he was. Sandman keeps his mother in the dark about his criminal activities, and Spider-Man goes to some lengths to keep Aunt May ignorant of his identity as well.
* DrivenToVillainy: Several, most notably Lizard and most strongly Hobgoblin 2112.
* EgomaniacHunter: Kraven the Hunter, able to hunt down and kill everything and anything up until he gets to Spider-Man; this ''sole'' failure is what ends up having him obsessively spend lifetimes hunting after Spidey as a result.
* ElectricSlide: Electro does this constantly as a FastAsLightning means to get around. Sometimes he may end up ''being'' electricity in the wires he slides down.
* ElementalShapeshifter:
** The villain Hydro Man can transform all or part of his body into water.
** Similarly, Sandman has the ability to change his body into sand.
** At one point the two got mushed together into a monster called Mud Man.
* EntitledBastard: J. Jonah Jameson manages to constantly paint Spider-Man in a negative light, create Scorpion, gets into fights and kidnappings with other villains -- and Spidey ''still'' covers for him every time.
* FailedASpotCheck: Some common criminals have done this to Spidey. Particularly, doing things like robbing a restaurant he is eating at because they thought the guy in the spidey costume at the corner table is just some guy eating in his pajamas and could not possibly be the real deal.
* FanserviceCharacters: [[MsFanservice Mary]] [[FanserviceModel Jane]] [[HeadTurningBeauty Watson]] and [[MsFanservice Felicia]] [[HeadTurningBeauty Hardy]]/[[ClassyCatBurglar Black]] [[SexyCatPerson Cat]] both provide {{Fanservice}} in the majority of their appearances in the franchise. Given that MJ is an actress and model and Felicia's [[SpyCatsuit choice of clothing]] as well as being a [[ClassyCatBurglar sexy cat thief]] and a [[FemmeFatale seductress]], it's not surprising.
* FatAndSkinny: Styx and Stone have it all but stated in their names -- Styx is horribly lanky and tall, while Stone isn't necessarily fat, but monstrous and burly.
* FixFic: ''ComicBook/OneMoreDay'' and the follow up ''ComicBook/OneMoreInTime'' was intended as this by the editorial thing though fans question if there was anything broken that needed fixing to begin with. Creator/RogerStern's "Hobgoblin Lives" was likewise one which fixed out the tangled mess left when he couldn't complete the story he had planned.
* FreudianExcuse: Several villains were revealed to have these in their backstories. The trope is applied literally in the cases of Doctor Octopus and Electro, who had coddling and stifling mothers, respectively.
* FromASingleCell: Sandman and Hydro-Man have this ability -- so long as one grain of sand or one drip of water is left in their mass, they can reform like nothing; as long as there's more sand or water nearby.
* GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke: Modern versions of the story typically have the spider that bites Peter be genetically engineered rather than radioactive.
* GenreBusting: Spider-Man as a whole is a superhero story that is also a classic {{Bildungsroman}}, a high school drama, romance story of all kinds (from teen romance all the way to epic melodramatic StarCrossedLovers stuff), kitchen sink working-class drama, a ScrewballComedy, science-fiction, and horror.
* HandWave: A rather famous excuse for whenever people ask where Spider-Man could be swinging from with no building in sight is that his webline is attached to an off-panel/offscreen helicopter.
* IrrationalHatred: Jameson for Spider-Man, and in fact most villains for Spider-Man, such as Harry "Green Goblin II" Osborn who resented Peter for being his AlwaysSomeoneBetter.
* IRejectYourReality: Jameson refuses to accept the opinions of others, including his own son, that Spider-Man is a hero, trying make his confronters second guess themselves.
* ItBeganWithATwistOfFate: It varies based on universe and continuity, but Spider-Man generally gets bitten by a certain spider and gains his superpowers through a genuine twist of fate--by simply being in the right place at the right time. A character in a later story claimed that the spider chose Peter as it was dying. It saw Peter's suffering as a benefit, as someone like that once given power would never allow themselves to be a victim again.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: [[DependingOnTheWriter Sometimes]], J. Jonah Jameson.
* KeepTheHomeFiresBurning: Mary Jane gets this plot a lot, notably in the [[http://spiderfan.org/comics/reviews/spiderman_web/031.html Kraven's Last Hunt]] storyline.
* KnightOfCerebus: Most of Spidey's villains are silly and corny -- even Venom can pull off a great few laughs. ComicBook/{{Carnage}} is 9 times out of 10 ''not'' that villain -- resorting to DeadBabyHumor and just wanting to kill ''everyone in the entire planet for his own twisted excitement''.
* KnockoutGas: Enemies of Spider-Man have used it from time to time. Mysterio, Kraven, the Chameleon, the Hobgoblins, and [[ComicBook/NormanOsborn Green Goblins]] are all culprits.
* LaserGuidedKarma: J. Jonah Jameson's poor treatment of Peter Parker and his financing attempts to capture/kill Spider-Man have repeatedly come back to haunt him.
* LifeDrinker: Morlun belongs to a race, the Ancients, that maintain immortality by draining life energy from people, especially people who are an animalistic totem.
* LizardFolk: Well, The Lizard.
* LookMaNoPlane: Spider-Man swings by helicopters all the time. In the game of the second movie, you end up chasing one... if you go too close to the rotors, exactly what you'd expect happens.
* LostInImitation: On account of Spider-Man's adaptation into diverse movies, games, cartoons and even newspaper strips, which take a CompressedAdaptation and CompositeCharacter approach, many elements get lost in the process. Not helping is when elements from these adaptations became CanonImmigrant. This tends to polarize Spider-Man's fanbase and it's partially to correct this, that recent stories like ''Spider-Verse'' were put into effect. The end result is that depending on where you start from, you end up having a different Spider-Man in your head.
** For many people, before Creator/SamRaimi's films, especially internationally[[note]]Marvel comics in its back issues didn't always publish regularly and serially in TheEighties and TheNineties around the globe and even then the decades of continuity and ongoing stories made it hard for newcomers to get into[[/note]], their main exposure to Spider-Man was Creator/StanLee's newspaper strip that was published and syndicated in many newspapers around the world. It was in this newspaper that Spider-Man first married Mary-Jane Watson. In this strip, which is LighterAndSofter than the regular continuity, Peter Parker is an ExperiencedProtagonist who is HappilyMarried and his dynamic with MJ is closer to [[Literature/TheThinMan Nick and Nora]] rather than the WetBlanketWife she was in the mainstream comics. Most of the action has Peter working for JJJ at the Daily Bugle as a photographer (when Peter had [[WhyDoYouKeepChangingJobs taken a variety of jobs]] in 616 continuity). Eventually the marriage went from the newspaper strip to the main comics continuity, and for a long time, Peter became known for being the most famous superhero who was a married man, which explains the backlash with ''ComicBook/OneMoreDay''.
** Until very recently, most audiences who knew of Spider-Man tended to see Mary Jane as his ComicBook/LoisLane and never even knew about Gwen Stacy (or Betty Brant, or Liz Allan), except through the internet. The ''ComicBook/SpiderGirl'' comics likewise established the most famous LegacyCharacter of Peter's at the time to be his daughter with MJ. The reason is that most of the cartoon adaptations and Sam Raimi's movies had established her as Peter's true love and the fact that Gwen Stacy had died was something that censorship would not allow kids cartoons to put across. Gwen Stacy's fame as a murder victim in regular continuity is further diluted with her appearance as a supporting character in ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' and the success of ''ComicBook/SpiderGwen'' and the upcoming animated series where she has spider-powers from the start.
** Likewise, for most people who come to the character from the newspaper strip or follow the regular continuity, Spider-Man hasn't been a KidHero or high-school student since his early issues. He graduated from high school to college similar to Marvel Comics EarlyInstallmentWeirdness where they averted ComicBookTime and had characters age and progress. However, cartoons and movies by focusing on his origins tends to paint him as that. Creator/BrianMichaelBendis' popular ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' wrote 200 issues with Peter still not graduating high school and the series ended without him graduating.
* MagicMeteor: The Looter's whole shtick was stealing meteorites for their power-granting ability.
* MagnetismManipulation: The villain Electro once had this as his ''main'' power. Where he was able to negate his weakness to water by making them evaporate with electromagnetism before it touches him. he was also able to paralyze people by ''overcharging their synapses'' with it. Otherwise, his normal ShockAndAwe powers had basic electromagnetic capabilities which he used for things like WallCrawl and fast travel on metal objects.
* MakeSomeNoise: Clayton Cole, aka Clash, is a self-proclaimed "Superstar of Sound", allowing him to torture Spidey with painful sound waves without causing damage to their surroundings. But he can still demolish walls and even bring down buildings with his sonic pulse generators.
* MasterOfDisguise: Chameleon, impersonating Spidey in ''the first issue''. He wears exquisitely made latex masks, is a skilled mimic, and his own mask is equipped with voice changer software.
* MasterOfIllusion: Mysterio. It's his specialty, and he is even often referred to by this exact title. Though his illusions are all based from his previous employment in the special effects industry.
* MsFanservice: Any of Spider-Man's girlfriends qualify as this with examples like Gwen Stacy, Carlie Cooper or Betty Brant but [[Characters/MarvelComicsMaryJaneWatson Mary Jane Watson]] and [[Characters/BlackCatMarvelComics Black Cat]] [[WorldsMostBeautifulWoman pretty much rank #1 on the list]].
* NoDialogueEpisode: ''Peter Parker: Spider-Man'' (Vol. 2) #38 saw a gang of criminal mimes going after Spider-Man.
* NoOntologicalInertia: The Lizard always regrows his right arm when in monster mode, and it just dissolves when he reverts to human.
* TheNotableNumeral: The Sinister Six.
* OutsideGenreFoe: While Peter does live in the FantasyKitchenSink that is the Franchise/MarvelUniverse, he largely sticks to traditional super villains. However he has encountered a few villains who fall into either more grounded or fantastical genres:
** Shathra and Morlun are more on the magical side of things, the former being the avatar of spider wasps while the latter is a type of vampire that feeds on the life essense of people from across the multiverse who are connected to the web of life and destiny.
** While they haven't lasted long, he has encountered ordinary people who for whatever reason have come into conflict with him as Peter Parker with many of them belonging to more dramatic and realistic genres. A notable example is Jonathan Caesar, a stalker who kidnapped Mary Jane and threatened to kill her if they didn't get married.
* ParentalSubstitute: As an orphan who lost his parents, and then Uncle Ben, Peter constantly seeks some form of adult validation in both his civilian and superhero career:
** Captain George Stacy, the father of his crush, served as this for Peter, and he became the first adult to approve of both Peter and Spider-Man, and was even okay with him dating his daughter. This didn't make Spider-Man's life easier since he died, making him guilty, and Gwen never knew this, and she blamed Spider-Man for this, and then she died anyway.
** Peter's older superhero buddies also serve as this. The Fantastic Four were the team that Spider-Man auditioned to join, with Reed Richards being the scientist Peter most admired. Likewise, Captain America belongs to the same generation as both Ben and May and Peter often said that Steve Rogers reminds him of Uncle Ben (who also served in the army during World War II). Tony Stark also served as one during the New Avengers arc, although recently Peter has become more of a rival and has a "rebellious kid" dynamic after becoming CEO of Parker Industries. Given Tony's playboy reputation, he's also uncomfortable seeing MJ working with him. This carried over into the MCU.
* {{Phlegmings}}: Just about every time Venom or some other symbiote-based character appears.
* PickOnSomeoneYourOwnSize: Most of the villains Spider-Man met when he was a teenager only developed a hatred for him after he kept getting in their way. One notable exception was the Green Goblin, who intended to make an impression on the New York mobs by capturing Spider-Man, who he thought would be an easy target. It all went downhill from there.
* PlotDrivenBreakdown: "I'm out of Web Fluid!"
* PortableHole: The Spot's main gimmick (due to a FreakLabAccident, of course).
* PsychoElectro: It's a guy named ''Electro''. Of course he's an insane bastard.
* RoguesGallery: Just about every adaptation has presented the classic villains (the Green Goblin, Doctor Octopus, Electro, the Shocker, the Rhino, Mysterio, etc.). It's probably the second most famous rogues gallery in comics, with only ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' outdoing it.
* RoguesGalleryTransplant: A regular import-export trade exists in the rogues gallery between Spider-Man and other Marvel heroes:
** One example that is practically the TropeCodifier for this effect: Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin of Crime. He began as a Spider-Man villain, and a generic villain mob-boss at that. Creator/FrankMiller revived and reinterpreted him as a major threat (modeled on The Octopus from Creator/WillEisner's ''ComicBook/TheSpirit'') during his run on ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}, making him Matt Murdoch's archenemy and playing a relatively smaller role in Spider-Man stories after that (the biggest one in recent history was in the ''Back in Black'' arc and ''Ultimate Spider-Man''). Miller's Fisk became an iconic and influential supervillain of TheEighties inspiring the ComicBook/PostCrisis take on ''ComicBook/LexLuthor'' which in a case of LostInImitation later inspired the Post-Clone Saga ''ComicBook/NormanOsborn''.
** It almost happened with The Sandman. After the first two battles he had with Spidey, he became an almost exclusive Comicbook/FantasticFour villain for the next 10 years. And later on he had a HeelFaceTurn and temporarily joined ''Comicbook/TheAvengers''. A similar situation happened with the Rhino, who for a while clocked more time as a villain in Comicbook/TheIncredibleHulk.
** Mysterio did this once on purpose because the real Spidey wasn't available, and made enough of an impression (notably, he indirectly caused the death of Karen Page) that he arguably still has a place among ''Dardevil's'' foes. He is still mostly a Spidey villain but when he shows up, there is a higher than normal chance that Daredevil will too. Likewise in ''ComicBook/OldManLogan'' he became a villain for ''ComicBook/{{Wolverine}}''.
** Boomerang, a standard Spidey foe, was initially a villain to the ''Hulk''. He was moved to Spidey when it became clear that a monster like the Hulk was a little out of the weight class of a BadassNormal with trick boomerangs.
** Spider-Man has also tussled with a few of ''ComicBook/FantasticFour's'' villains (since historically he has had the closest bond with them). Most notably ''ComicBook/DoctorDoom'' has appeared in some major stories, being the first Marvel Wide villain Spider-Man fought in the Lee-Ditko era, when he accidentally kidnapped Flash thinking he was Spider-Man (of course, Doom has fought pretty much ''every'' hero in the Marvel Universe at one point or another). Their paths also crossed a number of times, most notably in recent times being in the 50th issue of JMS' run where Spider-Man saves his life from a terrorist attack when [[ARareSentence Peter, MJ, Captain America and Doom were all stranded at the Denver Airport on account of a storm]].
** One of Spider-Man's all-time greatest battles with any villain was with the Juggernaut, an X-Men villain, in ''Amazing Spider-Man'' #229–230. This battle got a sequel during the Grim Hunt arc. Then later, Spider-Man fought Firelord, a former Herald of Galactus, who was a villain of ''The Avengers'' in ASM #269-270. Both villains were intended to establish Spider-Man as the ultimate underdog, battling enemies beyond his wheelhouse, and defeating them on his own when usually they gave both the X-Men and the Avengers problems and needed a super-team to take them down.
** Shriek started off fighting ComicBook/CloakAndDagger but more commonly fights Spidey since, due to their relative obscurity compared to Spidey. She's also well-known as Carnage's girlfriend.
** As of ''Dark Reign'', Norman Osborn has become an archenemy of the entire Earth-based Marvel universe, second only to Doctor Doom before being downgraded and returning to Spider-Man's titles in Dan Slott's run.
** Beetle IV, or Lady Beetle, started out fighting ComicBook/CaptainAmerica before quickly being moved to Spidey's corner.
** Shocker has been a consistent Spidey villain, outside of his stints with the Masters of Evil and the Thunderbolts. As of 2018, however, he's moved to New Jersey and started tangling with [[ComicBook/MsMarvel2014 Kamala Khan]].
** Interestingly, Arcade debuted in ''ComicBook/MarvelTeamUp'', [[TeamUpSeries a series about Spidey teaming up with different heroes]], but quickly became an X-Men villain before antagonizing the Avengers Academy without ever crossing paths with Spider-Man, except for 1992's ''VideoGame/SpiderManAndTheXMenInArcadesRevenge''. In ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManNickSpencer'', he's resurfaced as a Spidey foe once more.
* SaveTheJerk: Nick Spencer had Spidey dealing with the Thieves Guild, normally confined to the X-Men side of the Marvel Universe.
* SchoolyardBullyAllGrownUp: Subverted in that Flash Thompson matured and became a much nicer guy after he graduated from high school and enlisted in the army. His tour of duty made him a much more intelligent and introspective character.
* ScreensAreCameras: The earliest versions of the Spider-Slayer robots worked this way. The robots, piloted remotely by J. Jonah Jameson, would seem to have no technological need to project JJJ's face onto a TV screen mounted on the robot's "head," but that's exactly what they do.
* SecondFaceSmoke: J. Jonah Jameson does this a lot; Spidey has found ways of reversing it on him once in a while.
* ShoutOut: Probably the most of any Marvel character outside of ComicBook/{{Deadpool}}, as Spider-Man's quippy nature and [[JustForFun/OneOfUs slight geekiness]] makes these easy. It goes far enough that at one point when he shows up in ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'', and the characters begin to say "Look! It's--" he interrupts with "That's right... [[{{Catchphrase}} I'm]] ComicBook/{{Batman}}."
* SickEpisode: Quite a few over the years, invariably right before a major opponent shows up. Kraven the Hunter is a good example. The most famous is probably Spider-Man having a cold ComicBook/TheNightGwenStacyDied.
* SkyscraperMessages: A 1970s story has the Shocker doing this with whole city blocks as part of an extortion scheme. Unsurprisingly, a later story has [[PsychoElectro Electro]] doing the same thing.
* SkySurfing: The Green Goblin and Hobgoblin can do this with their respective Goblin Gliders.
* SpiderLimbs:
** Firstly, there's arch enemy ComicBook/DoctorOctopus.
** Then there's the PoweredArmour [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark]] gives Spider-Man in the ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}''.
** There's also Midnight Sons rogue Spider-X, who has boney spider-limbs.
** Pre-dating the ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}'' Iron Spider armor, a possible future Spider-Man was shown to be a genius with PoweredArmor using a similar system to Doc Ock's. Interestingly, the future Goblin serving as his nemesis had equivalent technology on ''her'' armor as well.
** Spider-Man once had a teenage fanboy who built himself a set of mechanical spider legs and tried to become Spidey's sidekick. Since he was a clumsy, [[GeekPhysique out-of-shape]] teenager with no combat experience, it was a good thing that Spider-Man was able to talk him out of it before he hurt himself. A few years later, he reemerged as the Steel Spider, having gotten into shape and learned some hand-to-hand fighting ability in the interim. After beating up some guys who'd attacked his girlfriend, he decided to hang up the costume but then reemerged during the ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}'' on the anti-registration side. His super-hero career apparently ended when he fought the Thunderbolts and Venom bit off and [[IAmAHumanitarian ate]] one of his arms and he was imprisoned in the Negative Zone.
** The ComicBook/SuperiorSpiderMan has added similar waldoes to his second costume. [[spoiler:Makes sense, since he's actually ComicBook/DoctorOctopus [[GrandTheftMe after stealing Spidey's body and life]].]] They are destroyed during the [[GrandFinale "Goblin Nation"]] arc.
** The third and fourth ComicBook/SpiderWoman both possessed these at different points. Originally they were a power of Charlotte Witter (Spider-Woman IV), as a result of [[LegoGenetics genetic manipulation]] by Doc Ock. After a lot of back-and-forth [[AllYourPowersCombined power-stealing]], the limbs -- [[SuperpowerLottery along with the other powers of all three other "Spider-Women"]] -- ended up with Mattie Franklin (Spider-Woman III).
** This has happened to Spidey before, but he managed to cure his condition thanks to the help of Dr. Curt Connors (a.k.a. the Lizard).
* StatuesqueStunner: Stunner, who's over seven feet tall and looks like a bodybuilder in skintight leotard. True to her name, she is described as breathtakingly beautiful, and in her first appearances, brags about how beautiful she is to some patrons at a bar, who judging by the smiles on their faces, didn't disagree. It's later revealed that the reason why she's so beautiful is because she's actually a [[HardLight virtual reality construct]] (tangible hologram) controlled by Angelina Brancale. Angelina is an obese woman who wanted to be thin and beautiful, so Doctor Octopus, another Spider-Man villain and her lover at the time, gave her a machine that allowed her to be Stunner.
* UselessSpleen: In the novel ''The Venom Factor'', Venom states that when he finds whoever is responsible for the murders (that Venom is being wrongly accused of) he will eat his spleen. Spider-Man comments that this is an odd choice of organ to target and that Venom likely doesn't even know where someone's spleen is.
* VerySpecialEpisode: Spider-Man has been a very popular character for very special episodes. Select {{narm}}-filled issues show our hero:
** Saving a young boy from being molested by his female babysitter [[http://www.misterkitty.org/extras/stupidcovers/superhero2.jpg by telling the tale about how he was molested as a kid by an adult friend named "Skip", who had an uncanny resemblance to Uncle Ben]]. Marvel has stated, however, that the story is not canon.
** Foiling a plot to [[http://scans-daily.dreamwidth.org/1333192.html inflict the youth of America with teen pregnancy by giving advice about sexuality.]]
** Saving a stoner from jumping off a building. [[http://wolkin.com/2010/04/152/why-am-i-doing-this-fastlane-commentary-part-1/ This mess]] was actually paid for with tax dollars, mind you.
** Teamed up with ComicBook/{{Storm}} and ComicBook/LukeCage to combat Smokescreen. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNsDvrU-fkA Guess what this one is about]]
** Teaming up with the Rangers and a paraplegic superheroine to teach the Calgary Stampede a lesson about road safety.
** Spider-Man is also known for one of the better Very Special Episodes. Creator/StanLee was asked to write a very special episode about drugs by the government, and, instead of creating a LongLostUncleAesop to focus the story on, he chose to use an existing character, with bonus points for being a rich white male with known emotional issues. UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode then [[IdiotBall refused to approve the comic]], which was the beginning of the end for the CCA.
** All these various issues would later be collected in a TPB "Spider-Man Vs. Substance Abuse".
* VileVulture: Adrian "The Vulture" Toomes is a villain who stylizes himself as a vulture to rob banks and to kill Spider-Man.
* VillainTakesAnInterest: The Green Goblin, especially since he's disappointed in the offspring.
* WalkingWasteland: Carrion and Styx.
* WolverinePublicity:
** As Marvel's BreakoutCharacter, Spider-Man became the company mascot and in the early issues often appeared in multiple titles, predating Wolverine by more than a decade having passed even Wolverine and Deadpool in over-saturation as he is now either a member or guest-starring with the three big teams in the Marvel Universe--including the X-Men, the Avengers (both teams), and the new ComicBook/FantasticFour (known as the FF); plus his own book is released twice a month.
** Interestingly in Spider-Man's early issues, the Fantastic Four made appearances to boost the newcoming Spider-Man's popularity. The Human Torch made campus speeches in Peter's school, and Dr. Doom became the first Marvel wide villain Spider-Man tussled with.
** Recent comics have seen Spider-Man fall into Iron Man's orbit around the time he was getting his big push in the movies. He, Aunt May, and MJ moved in Stark Tower, Peter wore a suit designed by Tony Stark (Iron Spider), joined his side during the ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}} (before switching over to Team Cap midway) and in recent comics, Peter has even become Iron Man-lite in that he runs his own business and claims to be Spider-Man's employer and backer, while MJ actually transitioned from his supporting cast into Tony's for a while.
* WomanlinessAsPathos: Gwen Stacy is a constant source of angst and turmoil for Peter, resulting in the circumstances her death being retreaded several times throughout publication, as well as many stories that resulted directly from her death or the events immediately leading up to them. For example, The Clone Saga started when StalkerWithACrush Miles Warren cloned both her and Peter Parker as revenge for Peter letting the object of his affection die. The story ''Sins Past'' revealed more details about her past, including that [[spoiler:she cheated on him with his archenemy ComicBook/NormanOsborn and bore two children.]]
* {{Wring Every Last Drop Out Of H|im}}er: Aunt May has been on the verge of death for ''four decades''.
* {{Yandere}}: The Venom Symbiote for Spider-Man.
* YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre: For all of his strength and speed, Peter beats himself up to the extreme whenever he fails to save someone, or even when people get hurt while he's fighting one or many supervillains, so he has to be reminded of this at times, usually by Mary Jane, but sometimes by people like Logan or Captain America.

to:

* ArachnidAppearanceAndAttire: Spider-Man is a notable example for being very colorful. Except when he's wearing his black costume. Notably, while Spider-Man is usually joking, laughing, and having a good time while fighting bad guys, when he ''stops'' quipping and gets serious, pissed, or seriously pissed, he becomes an absolutely ''terrifying'' opponent. When Peter's the "Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man," he defies this trope. When he drops the "friendly" part, he pretty much codifies it.
** There's also ComicBook/{{Venom}}, Carnage, and Toxin as symbiotes that copy Spidey's powers, and the various [[ComicBook/SpiderWoman Spider-Women]].
** Madame Web also counts.
** Lesser known Spider-Man foes include Tarantula, and Black Tarantula.
** The two [[ComicBook/ScarletSpider Scarlet Spiders]], both clones of the original Spider-Man.
** ''ComicBook/SpiderGwen'' and ''ComicBook/{{Silk}}'' as well.
* ArchEnemy: Three villains contest for the role: ComicBook/GreenGoblin, ComicBook/DoctorOctopus, and {{ComicBook/Venom}}. The reason for this is that the Green Goblin died in the '70s and spent a good 20-odd years dead before he came back to torment his foe, which is probably the record to beat for dead A-list villains.
BatPeople: In the meantime, Doctor Octopus and Venom filled the roles in the '70s and '80s/'90s, respectively. However, in recent decades, Venom became more of an AntiHero figure with his hatred of Peter toned down. At the same time, both Osborn and Octavius really hurt the wall-crawler in their own nasty ways, so if there is a contest for a mantle of Spider-Man’s greatest enemy, it’s between these two. As Stan Lee put it himself: ''"The Green Goblin is Peter Parker's greatest enemy, while Doctor Octopus is Spider-Man's greatest enemy.”''
** To elaborate on the quote: Doctor Octopus is the archenemy of Spider-Man in a very classic sense. Otto and Peter have [[MirrorCharacter a lot in common]], [[MadScientist both]] [[ScienceHero being scientists,]] [[FriendlessBackground who were bullied in school,]] and later got caught up in [[FreakLabAccident freak accidents]] that dramatically changed them forever. Both received a lot of power and both decided to channel that power by adopting an alter-ego based on eight-legged animal. The difference is that Peter chose to be a superhero and [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatResponsibility use his powers for good,]] while Otto chose to become a criminal, [[DrunkWithPower who tries to get back at the world.]] Doctor Octopus is the most recurring villain of the franchise, challenging the very idea of Spider-Man and being responsible for some of the most dramatic incidents in Peter’s career as a superhero: his first defeat, near death, death of Captain Stacey, establishment of Sinister Six and outright [[GrandTheftMe identity theft.]] At the same time, Otto never really cared about the man behind the mask and kept his rivalry with Spider-Man on sort of [[AffablyEvil “gentlemanly”]] level, actually making a point of trying not to hurt Peter’s loved ones.
** ComicBook/NormanOsborn is a different story. For him, being a supervillain with a [[SecretIdentity secret identity]] has never really carried any pragmatic benefits and has not served any goal aside from channeling his psychopathic and sadistic urges while maintaining a [[VillainWithGoodPublicity façade of respectful businessman]]. Since his very motivation as the Goblin (and later as Osborn himself) is to play out power fantasies, he was angry that someone stood up against him and swiftly decided to [[EvilIsPetty punish the person behind the mask]]. This dynamic between the characters eventually led to a lot of tragedy and pain in Peter’s life over the years as he saw [[RevengeByProxy numerous deaths and tortures of his loved ones]], starting with [[ComicBook/TheNightGwenStacyDied Gwen Stacy]], at the hands of Norman. Needless to say that it’s a [[ItsPersonal very personal]] conflict between the two and that Peter hates no one as much as he hates Osborn. He even had to [[ThouShaltNotKill stop himself from killing the latter]] several times. If Otto challenges the idea of Spider-Man as a superhero, Norman Osborn challenges Peter’s morality itself.
* TheArtifact: On account of Marvel's decision to set Spider-Man in a LikeRealityUnlessNoted New York (rather than DC's FantasyCounterpartCulture approach) as well as its adoption of ComicBookTime, some aspects of Spider-Man's lore has become a little anachronistic or dated (which only [[ReimaginingTheArtifact recently has started to change]]).
** Spider-Man is fundamentally a street-level superhero like Daredevil and originally his adventures had a realism because TheSixties to TheNineties was TheBigRottenApple era of New York City (where real events like the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City_blackout_of_1977 1977 blackout]] occurred in the page), a time of high crime statistics where the idea of multiple street-level superheroes in a single city had a little verisimilitude. Since the era of Giuliani and gentrification however, street crime level has dropped down while highly restrictive gun laws have been put into effect. Now of course the presence and activity of supervillains does not depend on that for explanations, but fundamentally the reduction of crime should mean that Spider-Man's status as a street-level hero being so important as to make demands on his personal and professional life need more justification than "[[BrooklynRage it's New York]]".
** The issue of gentrification and high costs in New York, and the challenge to the print media by online and the rise of cellphones and the internet has also meant that Peter's old job as a photographer for a newspaper and being the guy who "takes pictures of Spider-Man" and making a sufficient living off of that (despite being paid low by JJJ) and still living in New York, makes it harder to accept. It was already dated in TheOughties that Creator/SamRaimi's adoption of the same came off to more than a few observers as AnachronismStew (and Raimi made it work by artificially mixing different aspects of New York history in his film). In the ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' series, Peter becomes a web designer (albeit initially entering the Daily Bugle with the photographs) and part of the plot had the Daily Bugle transition from a print to an online magazine. Creator/DanSlott's run had Jameson become the Mayor of New York which essentially updated their dynamic.
** [[invoked]]Likewise, the idea of "Peter taking pictures of Spider-Man" which is a beloved trope and central to his dynamic of JJJ suffers because TechnologyMarchesOn. In TheSixties through TheEighties, when all photography was done on film and professional photographs were shot manually with analog controls (i.e. selecting f-stop, exposure, ISO with fingers and in-camera in the middle of a shot), it was believable that a superhero like Spider-Man would be too fast to capture and needed an insider as it were to provide the pictures, which made it possible for Peter to gain exclusive rights to Spider-Man's still photographs. But this made it harder with the digital revolution and impossible in the smartphone age, as such the trope started fading in comics in TheNineties and TheOughties and has disappeared in TheNewTens.
** Ben and May Parker in the comics belonged to "the Greatest Generation" and Ben was several years older than Richard, his younger brother (who is Peter's father). This kind of background made sense in that time owing to the trials of the Depression, the war years (Ben was a serviceman) and the generation gap, but after adopting ComicBookTime, both Ben and May became older as Peter grew younger, making it more of a stretch, leading to recent comics to try and write May into a younger person. Ultimate Ben and May were given a SettingUpdate from Greatest Generation to baby boomers (specifically ex-hippies) for this reason.
* ArtifactDomination:
** When Spider-Man first came into possession of his symbiotic costume he was unaware that it was a living entity. The symbiote, coming from a fairly violent species, slowly twisted Spidey into a more violent version of himself until he realized what was going on and got rid of it. Several other symbiotes exist in the Marvel Universe and the symbiote is a danger to take over its host. However most of these symbiotes have found sympathetic hosts, so it's not known how much influence they exert or how much is the host's own appetite for destruction.
** After leaving Spider-Man the first symbiote found Eddie Brock whose own hatred of Spider-Man and violent temper were a better fit.
** Another symbiote found violent serial killer Cletus Kasady and became Carnage, a mass-murdering supervillain.
** After Eddie Brock rejected the symbiote, he auctioned it off to Don Fortunato who gives it to his under-achieving son Angelo, hoping the power of the symbiote will finally make him into something. However when Angelo becomes frightened of his newfound power and refuses to kill a weakened Spider-Man, the symbiote abandons him.
** Agent Venom (Flash Thompson) is only allowed to wear the suit for 48 hours at a time precisely so it cannot take control of his mind.
* AscendedExtra: [[ClothesMakeTheSuperman Flash Thompson is the current host of Venom,]] [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman since S.H.I.E.L.D. decided that just the Venom symbiote EXISTING]] [[SealedEvilInACan made him the greatest threat on Earth]].
* AuthorAvatar:
** Creator/StanLee has said that Spider-Man was something of this for him. He also created J. Jonah Jameson based on other peoples' view of him, and as the EIC, Lee had a similar job as Jonah at Marvel. Both he and Ditko were children during the Depression and grew up with memories of poverty and having a hard luck life, which fed into the portrayal of poor working-class Peter, and the portrayal of Aunt May and Uncle Ben as Greatest Generation parental figures based on their memories of their families.
** Since Ditko drew and designed the comics as per the Marvel Method, some argue that Peter is more reflective of Ditko himself. The original [[http://www.lostonwallace.com/ditko.jpg Peter Parker]] in the comics bears a startling resemblance to Steve Ditko in his high school picture. Like Peter, Ditko was a loner, an outsider, a little aloof though also described as friendly and affable in one-on-one meetings, which mirrored the early Peter Parker to a great degree.
* AxCrazy: Carnage, Venom to an extent. And Green Goblin who should never be left out.
* BadButt: Venom and Carnage in the '90s cartoon, so so much...
-->'''Cletus Kassidy:''' [[NeverSayDie I'd eat you for breakfast.]]\\
'''Eddie Brock:''' [[ThreatBackfire Oh yeah,]] [[RegretEatingMe well, I'd give you indigestion...]] [[LameComeback man.]]
* BatPeople:
** Batwing is a young boy who was exposed to [[ToxicWasteCanDoAnything toxic waste]] in Carlsbad Caverns, causing him to become bat-like. Despite his monstrous appearance, he's still just a child, and Spider-Man tries to protect him from those who hate and fear him.
** ComicBook/{{Morbius}} is an AntiVillain who became a [[OurVampiresAreDifferent genetically modified vampire]], with bat genes and an [[LooksLikeOrlok Orlok-like appearance]]. However, in
some appearance -- like in an ''ComicBook/{{Exiles}}'' story arc and in [[WesternAnimation/SpiderManTheAnimatedSeries animated]] [[WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan2012 series]] -- he Morbius was transformed into a half-man half-bat monster, seeing more like an anthropomorphic bat with wings.
* BigApplesauce: While UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity is home for a lot of Marvel superheroes, this is ''his'' Neighborhood where he does his Friendly stuff. While he can battle the cosmic fights like ComicBook/FantasticFour, the global fights like ComicBook/TheAvengers, and the mystic fights like ComicBook/DoctorStrange, Spidey will ''always'' be seen webslinging across the Manhattan skyline.
* BigBrotherMentor: ComicBook/{{Daredevil}} has been this to Spider-Man from time to time. Overlaps with HeterosexualLifePartners. Likewise originally Johnny Storm.
* BootstrappedTheme: The theme song for the 1967 cartoon is one for the franchise as a whole. Covers for it and variations appeared in ''Film/SpiderManTrilogy'' and a full orchestral symphonic opening for ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming''. It's also a popular standard covered by Music/TheRamones and Music/{{Aerosmith}} among others.
others.
* BraggingThemeTune: Sing along, kids! ''Spider-Man, Spider-Man, does whatever a spider can. Spins a web, any size. Catches thieves, just like flies. Look out! Here comes the Spider-Man.''
* BrieferThanTheyThink:
** Spider-Man's origins as a KidHero in high school are given a huge amount of emphasis in the character's portrayal in various media, including recent movies and animated series. Considering this was one of the things that originally made him so unique and relatable, it makes sense to a degree. However, Peter actually graduated from high school and went to college (the fictitious Empire State University) in Issue 28 of the Lee[=/=]Ditko ''Amazing'' run -- only two and a half years after his first appearance. The classic period of Spider-Man as WakeUpGoToSchoolSaveTheWorld lasted a very short time indeed, and most of his comic exploits from then on were as an early 20s young man, with it taking ''thirteen'' years for him to graduate college.
BrieferThanTheyThink: Adaptations tend to emphasize the high school element to the degree that it has arguably become LostInImitation. Brian Michael Bendis took this to the logical extreme in the ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' comics, where 200+ issues were written and completed over a span of a decade without Peter or his class graduating from high school. Meanwhile, the recent Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse films feature the webhead being played by Tom Holland, the youngest actor yet to play Spider-Man, and he's still in high school as of his seventh movie appearance (three of those being solo films) and 6 years of real-time.
** * CapitalismIsBad: The BettyAndVeronica LoveTriangle between earliest instances of Peter Parker, Gwen Stacy, Parker as an industrialist were in an alternate timeline in ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManTheAnimatedSeries'' and Mary Jane Watson that everyone remembers was actually ''very'' short, only lasting a few issues (44-52) before Peter settled on Gwen ''VideoGame/SpiderManEdgeOfTime'' and Mary Jane became BetaCouple with Harry Osborn, though she would still flirt with Peter in both instances, the two wealthy Parkers were shown as jerks and make passes at him later on, which Gwen usually replied with cutting barbs. Her teasing and flirting dialed down bad guys
* ComingOfAgeStory: Adaptations tend to follow similar beats even
when she realized it is restricted to selected periods (his high school period and occasionally but rarely his commitment to Gwen was serious college). Modern versions such as Ultimate Marvel and then MJ was PutOnABus returning semi-regularly from Issue 87 where her dynamic with Gwen was closer to VitriolicBestBuds or "frenemies".
** The alien costume period.
the MCU have Spider-Man started wearing the black costume in 1984 and wore it until 1988 and it is immortalized in notable stories like "The Death trying to go from small steps hero to a bigger kind of Jean [=DeWolff=]" and "Kraven's Last Hunt," cementing it in fans' minds as a long term thing. But in all of those stories the costume was actually cloth. The actual alien costume was first worn in #252 and was removed in #258 before making a one-issue return in ''Web of Spider-Man #1''. In fact, by the time the issue of ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'' showing how he got the costume was published he had already ditched the costume and was using the cloth copy.
* ButtMonkey:
** Some writers seem to think that the biggest appeal of Spider-Man is that things constantly go wrong for him. As a result, we get countless stories of Peter suffering humiliation, lack of money, sickly aunt, girl trouble, and just all around unpleasantness, to the point that reading the stories can actually get a little depressing. Note that after John Romita Sr. started
hero working on for the title with Creator/StanLee, Ultimates or the book became much LighterAndSofter than it had been recently, a move which led most fans to label it as the golden age of Spider-Man.
** J. Jonah Jameson, the Shocker, the Jason Macendale Hobgoblin, and others have all shared this role at different times over the years.
Avengers.
* CallItKarma: J. Jonah Jameson's attempts to capture and destroy Spider-Man have given him no end of grief over the years.
* CanonDiscontinuity: A one-off special on child abuse revealing that Peter had been sexually abused.
* CapitalismIsBad: While not an aesop that Creator/StanLee[[note]]Creator of ''ComicBook/IronMan'' as specifically a good-guy capitalist after seeing Marvel's general anti-establishment trend and seeking to balance it[[/note]] and certainly not Creator/SteveDitko[[note]]An Objectivist with right-wing views though Ditko's tracts often wax more on the self-righteous idealism rather than Rand's economic ideas[[/note]] intended, the overall subtext of Spider-Man as a working-class aspiring scholarship boy does tend to highlight how important a role class plays in his life, and the stories by later writers also play this up:
**
FriendlessBackground: In the Lee-Ditko era, wealthy characters are shown as being jerks of some kind or other (Harry Osborn, Gwen Stacy, J. Jonah Jameson, Norman Osborn) with the only exceptions being academics and professionals (such as the doctor who operates Aunt May in "if this be my destiny..." who makes it clear that he sees Peter as [[TheRealHeroes a real hero]] compared to [[DramaticIrony Spider-Man]]). This got played down in the Lee-Romita era where Peter has friendly relations with the Osborns, romances Gwen and befriends her father George Stacy, but even then, and especially when Gerry Conway came on board, Peter is presented as a foil for Harry, the poor up-and-coming kid as opposed to the rich kid who is nothing without his father's name and inheritance, which leads him to turn to drugs to cope with his insecurity.
** A number of Spider-Man's villains over the years tend to be wealthy types,
Adaptations, such as the Kingpin, Norman Osborn, and Roderick Kingsley. In ''Marvel Knights Spider-Man'', Norman Osborn mocks ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'', this is dialed down with Peter with classist insults, for being a loser who works having Ultimate MJ as a high-school teacher despite his great talent, friend from childhood and confiding in her his secret early in his run, which Spider-Man retorts by pointing out that Norman could well have cured cancer with all his wealth and connections if he actually cares about improving lives. Norman then replies that he only said it to hurt Peter by his values, because he on the other hand as he puts it, "I don't give a rat's ass".
** ''Ultimate Spider-Man'' takes this further (on account of Bendis being a more liberal figure than either Lee or Ditko were). Uncle Ben and Aunt May are ex-hippies with May still proud of her arrest record
carried over a protest. When Peter tells Aunt May that Norman Osborn is a bad guy, Aunt May quotes Ben about how every rich person he knew acquired it illegally. A number of in ''Film/TheAmazingSpiderManSeries'' and ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming'' where Peter's enemies, such as the Shocker, are StarvingStudent whose work was hijacked by corporations, the Kingpin owns Spider-Man's intellectual property and can buy his way out of a video showing him killing a man, and likewise Peter's own father Richard Parker had his life's work (the Venom suit intended to cure cancer) defunded and complicated because corporations wanted to make it into weapons.
** An interesting example of this trope is how writers tackle the idea of a successful Peter Parker. The earliest instances of Peter Parker as an industrialist was in an alternate timeline in ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManTheAnimatedSeries'' and ''VideoGame/SpiderManEdgeOfTime'' and in both instances the two wealthy Parkers were shown as jerks and bad guys, as is the Peter from ''House of M''. Dan Slott had Otto Octavius hack Peter's body and develop Parker Industries as an AntiHeroSubstitute which the revived Peter Parker ended up running as a HonestCorporateExecutive albeit one so honest that he ended up dismantling his company when a virus threatened the world. Nick Spencer who followed Slott, has Peter ruminate about the ethics of grappling a position of unearned wealth and the consequences of Peter accepting Ock's status-quo on a silver platter, cementing the idea that the richer Peter gets, the less pure he becomes.
* CentralTheme:
** "With great power, there must also come --great responsibility". What it means to have power and to use it in a socially and morally responsible way.
** Your actions and choices have consequences, including the ones you didn't intend or expect, and you have to live with them whether you like it or not, and whether it was your fault or not.
** Everyone has some kind of secret, either a big one or a small one, and there's always more to people than you assume. Just as the world assumes little of Peter Parker and Spider-Man, Peter himself often underestimates or misjudges people around him.
** You have to work for every thing in your life, whether it's your job, your superhero calling, your marriage, your relationships. People are complicated, messy and demanding, and you have to be there for them and make things work and never take people for granted.
* TheChosenMany: According to Araña's series and the ''The Other'', ''Grim Hunt'', ''Spider Island'', and ''Spider-Verse'' arcs, Peter is one of a group of arachnid-themed super-powered individuals empowered by a mystical force called the Web of Life, and is ''the'' [[TheChosenOne Champion]] of the totemic spider deity behind the Web of Life, succeeding Ezekiel Sims and to be succeeded by Anya Corizon in the event he turns evil.
* CloseOnTitle: "The Night That Gwen Stacy Died" does not show its title and splash panel until the last page, in order to prevent readers from finding out too early which ''Spider-Man'' character Marvel decided to kill off.
* ClothesMakeTheSuperman: The Vulture, Shocker, The Rhino, Mysterio, technically Doctor Octopus. Subsequently, Venom and the other symbiotes.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Mary Jane, in her earliest appearances, and her ridiculous lingo. It was the 1960's, but nobody ever talked like that, ''ever''. Nobody outside a straitjacket, anyways...
** White Rabbit is another example of this trope.
* ComingOfAgeStory: In nearly all his incarnations:
** Comics scholars generally see Amazing Fantasy #15 to Amazing Spider-Man #149 (the Lee-Ditko, Lee-Romita, and Conway-Romita era) as an extended coming of age saga where Peter Parker gets superpowers at age 15, briefly uses them for profit, then after failing to help stop a criminal who later kills his Uncle Ben, making him commit so becoming a Superhero and learn responsibility by becoming the caretaker and provider for his Aunt May, working for a living, and going to high school at the same time. The "Master Planner" arc was the period in which Peter ended his youth and became a college-going young adult, he would later form a serious relationship with Gwen Stacy before additional tragedy ends up leading to a [[InnocenceLost loss of innocence]], where his adult social circle is marked by tragedy and broken friendships (Gwen and Harry respectively). Most notably, Conway's final issue in his run, Issue 149, has Peter finally passing his [[SexAsARiteOFPassage rite of passage]] [[spoiler:when it ends with what is strongly implied to be him and MJ having sex together, finally losing his virginity and becoming a man]].
** Adaptations tend to follow similar beats even when it is restricted to selected periods (his high school period and occassionally but rarely his college). Modern versions such as Ultimate Marvel and the MCU has Spider-Man trying to go from small steps hero to a bigger kind of hero working for the Ultimates or the Avengers.
* TheCommissionerGordon: One of the things that set Spider-Man apart was the fact that he never really had a FriendOnTheForce unlike Batman did or the support of the press that Superman did, which made his superhero[=/=]civilian life balance literal murder many times over. That said there were figures who did play this role for Spider-Man but they never lasted long:
** Captain George Stacy was the first character who really played this role for Spider-Man in the comics. He was friendly and tried to play down some of Peter's issues with authority. Then he dies and while George Stacy in his deathbed revealed he was Peter's SecretSecretKeeper and approved of him, his death ended up making Spider-Man look bad within the police force and in the eyes of Gwen (who blamed him for her father's death).
** Captain Jean [=DeWolff=] was the other major character who tried to be this for Spider-Man. But then her death left another vacuum in his eyes.
** Most recently, there's Captain Yuri Watanabe, who dons the identity of Wraith and becomes a vigilante in her own right.
* ConceptsAreCheap: In lesser stories, "With Great Power ComesGreatResponsibility" becomes this. It was never really Peter's BadassCreed as later comics and adaptations made it out to be. It was just a caption voiced by the narrator in ''Amazing Fantasy #15'' in classic Creator/StanLee dated PurpleProse. But the attempt to make this Spider-Man's ethos often leads to much fuzziness about what powers and responsibilities means, leading to much InformedAttribute.
* CrapsackWorld: This has been a hallmark of Peter Parker's life for a very long time, although it's perhaps a little more realistic than most depictions when Peter occasionally catches a break every now and again. CharacterDevelopment would later show that life was
no picnic for many of Peter's supporting cast members and even some of his villains. In general whenever a new writing team takes over there's always some shakeup to the status-quo or other and then another that follows when the next one takes over and so on.
* CriticalPsychoanalysisFailure: Stan Lee and Marcos Martin's non-canon story "Identity Crisis" (not to be confused with the in-canon 616 story of the same name), has Spider-Man going to a psychologist Dr. Gray Madder (a pun on gray matter) and talking to him about his identity issues, which involve the constant changes and endless retcons to his supporting cast and rogues, such as his Aunt May being alive and dead, his marriage to MJ being retconned in and out, her being pregnant and not, Green Goblin dying and coming back, {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing the bizarre changes to Spider-Man continuity that actually drives Dr. Gray Madder nuts and has ''him'' going to a shrink.
* CrossOver: With ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}''. [[http://scans-daily.dreamwidth.org/3546489.html And it is glorious.]]
* CutLexLuthorACheck: Doctor Octopus, the Green Goblin, the Shocker, and Mysterio all invent remarkable inventions that could have earned them large fortunes if they'd used them legitimately. Later subverted by the Sandman, who becomes sick of crime and tries to go straight. He eventually wound up using his powers working for the government of [[{{Ruritania}} Symkaria]] under Silver Sable. Spider-Man himself would also end up working for Sable for a little while after she offered him $1,000 a day to do so. Also subverted when Spider-Man actually tries to sell his web formula to a chemical company, only for the executives to reject the offer. Further subverted when Spider-Man saves a banker/stock-broker who cuts [[BornLucky Spider-Man]] a check -- only for a bank-teller to deny the check since [[SpannerInTheWorks Spider-Man has no identification.]]
** Osborn is a very good example of this trope, as it is often lampshaded--most notably by the Hobgoblin--that he could be several magnitudes wealthier if he just marketed his stuff, which would give him a lot of the power he is after anyway. It's explained and {{justified|Trope}} by the fact that Osborn is crazy.
* DaEditor: J. Jonah Jameson, who is probably the most famous example of this trope ''by far'' -- even serving as its page image.
* DeadpanSnarker:
** Spider-Man normally makes YouFightLikeACow remarks, which never fails to piss off his enemies -- and he very well knows this.
** Venom too, though he's much more of a LargeHam spewing out BlackComedy.
* DeathByOriginStory: Uncle Ben. His murder is what makes Spider-Man decide to become a crimefighter.
* DeceasedParentsAreTheBest: Peter's parents were agents of [[ComicBook/NickFury S.H.I.E.L.D.]] and once saved ComicBook/{{Wolverine}}'s life. Likewise, Uncle Ben was a World War II veteran and a great Dad.
* DeliveryNotDesired: Peter records a message to the deceased Gwen Stacy, reflecting on his time with her and explaining she's the reason he's always a bit blue around Valentine's Day. When his wife Mary Jane hears him, rather than be upset that he's talking to his lost love, she understands and asks him to say hello for her.
* DistaffCounterpart: At last count, Spider-Man has had no less than five of them, including [[ComicBook/SpiderGirl his own daughter]]. Unlike most versions, none of them had any major connections to Peter and stood on their own. In fact, in an odd inversion, when the second Comicbook/SpiderWoman was introduced in ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'', the Marvel EIC at the time wanted him to have a black costume similar to hers. Thus, the black costume was made, leading to the creation of Venom years later. Some of the villains would get this too, including Sandman and the Scorpion.
* DistressedDamsel: All of Spider-Man's girlfriends and love interests at some point or another. Gwen Stacy is most famous for the fact that Spider-Man didn't save her. MJ, on the other hand, often fights like a wildcat when someone non-superpowered tries to grab her.
* DontTellMama: The original Green Goblin uses his last words to beg Parker not to tell his son about who he was. Sandman keeps his mother in the dark about his criminal activities, and Spider-Man goes to some lengths to keep Aunt May ignorant of his identity as well.
* DrivenToVillainy: Several, most notably Lizard and most strongly Hobgoblin 2112.
* EgomaniacHunter: Kraven the Hunter, able to hunt down and kill everything and anything up until he gets to Spider-Man; this ''sole'' failure is what ends up having him obsessively spend lifetimes hunting after Spidey as a result.
* ElectricSlide: Electro does this constantly as a FastAsLightning means to get around. Sometimes he may end up ''being'' electricity in the wires he slides down.
* ElementalShapeshifter:
** The villain Hydro Man can transform all or part of his body into water.
** Similarly, Sandman has the ability to change his body into sand.
** At one point the two got mushed together into a monster called Mud Man.
* EntitledBastard: J. Jonah Jameson manages to constantly paint Spider-Man in a negative light, create Scorpion, gets into fights and kidnappings with other villains -- and Spidey ''still'' covers for him every time.
* FailedASpotCheck: Some common criminals have done this to Spidey. Particularly, doing things like robbing a restaurant he is eating at because they thought the guy in the spidey costume at the corner table is just some guy eating in his pajamas and could not possibly be the real deal.
* FanserviceCharacters: [[MsFanservice Mary]] [[FanserviceModel Jane]] [[HeadTurningBeauty Watson]] and [[MsFanservice Felicia]] [[HeadTurningBeauty Hardy]]/[[ClassyCatBurglar Black]] [[SexyCatPerson Cat]] both provide {{Fanservice}} in the majority of their appearances in the franchise. Given that MJ is an actress and model and Felicia's [[SpyCatsuit choice of clothing]] as well as being a [[ClassyCatBurglar sexy cat thief]] and a [[FemmeFatale seductress]], it's not surprising.
* FatAndSkinny: Styx and Stone have it all but stated in their names -- Styx is horribly lanky and tall, while Stone isn't necessarily fat, but monstrous and burly.
* FixFic: ''ComicBook/OneMoreDay'' and the follow up ''ComicBook/OneMoreInTime'' was intended as this by the editorial thing though fans question if there was anything broken that needed fixing to begin with. Creator/RogerStern's "Hobgoblin Lives" was likewise one which fixed out the tangled mess left when he couldn't complete the story he had planned.
* FreudianExcuse: Several villains were revealed to have these in their backstories. The trope is applied literally in the cases of Doctor Octopus and Electro, who had coddling and stifling mothers, respectively.
* FromASingleCell: Sandman and Hydro-Man have this ability -- so long as one grain of sand or one drip of water is left in their mass, they can reform like nothing; as long as there's more sand or water nearby.
* GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke: Modern versions of the story typically have the spider that bites Peter be genetically engineered rather than radioactive.
* GenreBusting: Spider-Man as a whole is a superhero story that is also a classic {{Bildungsroman}}, a high school drama, romance story of all kinds (from teen romance all the way to epic melodramatic StarCrossedLovers stuff), kitchen sink working-class drama, a ScrewballComedy, science-fiction, and horror.
* HandWave: A rather famous excuse for whenever people ask where Spider-Man could be swinging from with no building in sight is that his webline is attached to an off-panel/offscreen helicopter.
* IrrationalHatred: Jameson for Spider-Man, and in fact most villains for Spider-Man, such as Harry "Green Goblin II" Osborn who resented Peter for being his AlwaysSomeoneBetter.
* IRejectYourReality: Jameson refuses to accept the opinions of others, including his own son, that Spider-Man is a hero, trying make his confronters second guess themselves.
* ItBeganWithATwistOfFate: It varies based on universe and continuity, but Spider-Man generally gets bitten by a certain spider and gains his superpowers through a genuine twist of fate--by simply being in the right place at the right time. A character in a later story claimed that the spider chose Peter as it was dying. It saw Peter's suffering as a benefit, as someone like that once given power would never allow themselves to be a victim again.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: [[DependingOnTheWriter Sometimes]], J. Jonah Jameson.
* KeepTheHomeFiresBurning: Mary Jane gets this plot a lot, notably in the [[http://spiderfan.org/comics/reviews/spiderman_web/031.html Kraven's Last Hunt]] storyline.
* KnightOfCerebus: Most of Spidey's villains are silly and corny -- even Venom can pull off a great few laughs. ComicBook/{{Carnage}} is 9 times out of 10 ''not'' that villain -- resorting to DeadBabyHumor and just wanting to kill ''everyone in the entire planet for his own twisted excitement''.
* KnockoutGas: Enemies of Spider-Man have used it from time to time. Mysterio, Kraven, the Chameleon, the Hobgoblins, and [[ComicBook/NormanOsborn Green Goblins]] are all culprits.
* LaserGuidedKarma: J. Jonah Jameson's poor treatment of Peter Parker and his financing attempts to capture/kill Spider-Man have repeatedly come back to haunt him.
* LifeDrinker: Morlun belongs to a race, the Ancients, that maintain immortality by draining life energy from people, especially people who are an animalistic totem.
* LizardFolk: Well, The Lizard.
* LookMaNoPlane: Spider-Man swings by helicopters all the time. In the game of the second movie, you end up chasing one... if you go too close to the rotors, exactly what you'd expect happens.
longer entirely alone.
* LostInImitation: On account of Spider-Man's adaptation into diverse movies, games, cartoons cartoons, and even newspaper strips, which take a CompressedAdaptation and CompositeCharacter approach, many elements get lost in the process. Not helping is when elements from these adaptations became CanonImmigrant. This tends to polarize Spider-Man's fanbase and it's partially to correct this, that recent stories like ''Spider-Verse'' were put into effect. The end result is that depending on where you start from, you end up having a different Spider-Man in your head.
** For many people, before Creator/SamRaimi's films, especially internationally[[note]]Marvel comics in its back issues didn't weren't always publish published regularly and serially in TheEighties and TheNineties around the globe and even then the decades of continuity and ongoing stories made it hard for newcomers to get into[[/note]], their main exposure to Spider-Man was Creator/StanLee's newspaper strip that was published and syndicated in many newspapers around the world. It was in this newspaper that Spider-Man first married Mary-Jane Watson. In this strip, which is LighterAndSofter than the regular continuity, Peter Parker is an ExperiencedProtagonist who is HappilyMarried and his dynamic with MJ is closer to [[Literature/TheThinMan Nick and Nora]] rather than the WetBlanketWife she was in the mainstream comics. Most of the action has Peter working for JJJ at the Daily Bugle as a photographer (when Peter had [[WhyDoYouKeepChangingJobs taken a variety of jobs]] in 616 continuity). Eventually Eventually, the marriage went from the newspaper strip to the main comics continuity, and for a long time, Peter became known for being the most famous superhero who was a married man, which explains the backlash with ''ComicBook/OneMoreDay''.
** Until very recently, most audiences who knew of Spider-Man tended to see Mary Jane as his ComicBook/LoisLane and never even knew about Gwen Stacy (or Betty Brant, or Liz Allan), except through the internet. The ''ComicBook/SpiderGirl'' comics likewise established the most famous LegacyCharacter of Peter's at the time to be his daughter with MJ. The reason is that most of the cartoon adaptations and Sam Raimi's movies had established her as Peter's true love and the fact that Gwen Stacy had died was something that censorship would not allow kids kid's cartoons to put across. Gwen Stacy's fame as a murder victim in regular continuity is further diluted with her appearance as a supporting character in ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' and the success of ''ComicBook/SpiderGwen'' and the upcoming animated series where she has spider-powers from the start.
** Likewise, for most people who come to the character from the newspaper strip or follow the regular continuity, Spider-Man hasn't been a KidHero or high-school student since his early issues. He graduated from high school to college similar to Marvel Comics EarlyInstallmentWeirdness where they averted ComicBookTime and had characters age and progress. However, cartoons and movies by focusing on his origins tends tend to paint him as that. Creator/BrianMichaelBendis' popular ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' wrote 200 issues with Peter still not graduating high school and the series ended without him graduating.
* MagicMeteor: The Looter's whole shtick was stealing meteorites for ProgressivelyPrettier: Brian Michael Bendis and Mark Bagley explicitly modeled Ultimate Peter on Romita's version, and their power-granting ability.
* MagnetismManipulation: The villain Electro once had this as his ''main'' power. Where he was able to negate his weakness to water by making them evaporate with electromagnetism before it touches him. he was also able to paralyze people by ''overcharging their synapses'' with it. Otherwise, his normal ShockAndAwe powers had basic electromagnetic capabilities which he used for things
Peter is a fairly good-looking teenager. In the film versions, Creator/AndrewGarfield looks the most like WallCrawl the handsome Peter of the comics, while both Tobey Maguire's and fast travel on metal objects.
* MakeSomeNoise: Clayton Cole, aka Clash, is a self-proclaimed "Superstar
Tom Holland's version of Sound", allowing him to torture Spidey with painful sound waves without causing damage to their surroundings. But he can still demolish walls and even bring down buildings with his sonic pulse generators.
* MasterOfDisguise: Chameleon, impersonating Spidey in ''the first issue''. He wears exquisitely made latex masks, is a skilled mimic, and his own mask is equipped with voice changer software.
* MasterOfIllusion: Mysterio. It's his specialty, and he is even often referred to by this exact title. Though his illusions are all based from his previous employment in
Peter, resembles the special effects industry.
* MsFanservice: Any
original version of Peter [[TheyLookJustLikeEveryoneElse who could pass for nearly anyone on the street]].
* {{Sidekick}}:
Spider-Man's girlfriends qualify as this with examples non-sidekick status gets diluted a little in Adaptations like Gwen Stacy, Carlie Cooper or Betty Brant but [[Characters/MarvelComicsMaryJaneWatson Mary Jane Watson]] ''ComicBook/UltimateMarvel'' and [[Characters/BlackCatMarvelComics Black Cat]] [[WorldsMostBeautifulWoman pretty much rank #1 on the list]].
* NoDialogueEpisode: ''Peter Parker: Spider-Man'' (Vol. 2) #38 saw a gang of criminal mimes going after Spider-Man.
* NoOntologicalInertia: The Lizard always regrows his right arm when in monster mode, and it just dissolves when he reverts to human.
* TheNotableNumeral: The Sinister Six.
* OutsideGenreFoe: While
''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse'', where Peter does live is designated as officially in "apprentice status" to either Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. or to Tony Stark. And in the FantasyKitchenSink that is the Franchise/MarvelUniverse, he largely sticks to traditional super villains. However he has encountered a few villains who fall into either more grounded or fantastical genres:
** Shathra and Morlun are more on the magical side of things, the former being the avatar of spider wasps while the latter is a type of vampire that feeds on the life essense of people from across the multiverse who are connected to the web of life and destiny.
** While they haven't lasted long, he has encountered ordinary people who for whatever reason have come into conflict with him as Peter Parker with many of them belonging to more dramatic and realistic genres. A notable example is Jonathan Caesar, a stalker who kidnapped Mary Jane and threatened to kill her if they didn't get married.
* ParentalSubstitute: As an orphan who lost his parents, and then Uncle Ben, Peter constantly seeks some form of adult validation in both his civilian and superhero career:
** Captain George Stacy, the father of his crush, served as this for Peter, and he became the first adult to approve of both Peter and Spider-Man, and was even okay with him dating his daughter. This didn't make Spider-Man's life easier since he died, making him guilty, and Gwen never knew this, and she blamed Spider-Man for this, and then she died anyway.
** Peter's older superhero buddies also serve as this. The Fantastic Four were the team that Spider-Man auditioned to join, with Reed Richards being the scientist Peter most admired. Likewise, Captain America belongs to the same generation as both Ben and May and Peter often said that Steve Rogers reminds him of Uncle Ben (who also served in the army during World War II). Tony Stark also served as one during the New Avengers arc, although recently Peter has become more of a rival and has a "rebellious kid" dynamic after becoming CEO of Parker Industries. Given Tony's playboy reputation, he's also uncomfortable seeing MJ working with him. This carried over into the MCU.
* {{Phlegmings}}: Just about every time Venom or some other symbiote-based character appears.
* PickOnSomeoneYourOwnSize: Most
case of the villains Spider-Man met when he was a teenager only developed a hatred for latter, Spidey has his suit and equipment handed to him after he kept getting in their way. One notable exception was the Green Goblin, who intended to make an impression on the New York mobs by capturing Spider-Man, who he thought would be an easy target. It all went downhill from there.Tony Stark.
* PlotDrivenBreakdown: "I'm out of Web Fluid!"
* PortableHole: The Spot's main gimmick (due to a FreakLabAccident, of course).
* PsychoElectro: It's a guy named ''Electro''. Of course
SneakingOutAtNight: Many adaptations that use his younger iterations where he's an insane bastard.
* RoguesGallery: Just about every adaptation has presented the classic villains (the Green Goblin, Doctor Octopus, Electro, the Shocker, the Rhino, Mysterio, etc.). It's probably the second most famous rogues gallery in comics, with only ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' outdoing it.
* RoguesGalleryTransplant: A regular import-export trade exists in the rogues gallery between Spider-Man
still a teenager (e.g. ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'', or cartoons like ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' and other Marvel heroes:
**
''WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan2012'') sometimes use this trope, partially to get some drama out of it. One common example that is practically the TropeCodifier for this effect: Wilson Fisk, the Kingpin of Crime. He began as a Spider-Man villain, and a generic villain mob-boss at that. Creator/FrankMiller revived and reinterpreted him as a major threat (modeled on The Octopus from Creator/WillEisner's ''ComicBook/TheSpirit'') during his run on ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}, making him Matt Murdoch's archenemy and playing a relatively smaller role in Spider-Man stories after that (the biggest one in recent history was in the ''Back in Black'' arc and ''Ultimate Spider-Man''). Miller's Fisk became an iconic and influential supervillain of TheEighties inspiring the ComicBook/PostCrisis take on ''ComicBook/LexLuthor'' which in a case of LostInImitation later inspired the Post-Clone Saga ''ComicBook/NormanOsborn''.
** It almost happened with The Sandman. After the first two battles he had with Spidey, he became an almost exclusive Comicbook/FantasticFour villain for the next 10 years. And later on he had a HeelFaceTurn and temporarily joined ''Comicbook/TheAvengers''. A similar situation happened with the Rhino, who for a while clocked more time as a villain in Comicbook/TheIncredibleHulk.
** Mysterio did this once on purpose because the real
Spidey wasn't available, and made enough of an impression (notably, he indirectly caused the death of Karen Page) that he arguably still has a place among ''Dardevil's'' foes. He is still mostly a Spidey villain but when he shows up, there is a higher than normal chance that Daredevil will too. Likewise in ''ComicBook/OldManLogan'' he became a villain for ''ComicBook/{{Wolverine}}''.
** Boomerang, a standard Spidey foe, was initially a villain to the ''Hulk''. He was moved to Spidey when it became clear that a monster like the Hulk was a little out of the weight class of a BadassNormal with trick boomerangs.
** Spider-Man has also tussled with a few of ''ComicBook/FantasticFour's'' villains (since historically he has had the closest bond with them). Most notably ''ComicBook/DoctorDoom'' has appeared in some major stories, being the first Marvel Wide villain Spider-Man fought in the Lee-Ditko era, when he accidentally kidnapped Flash
thinking that he was Spider-Man (of course, Doom has fought pretty much ''every'' hero in the Marvel Universe at one point or another). Their paths also crossed a number of times, most notably in recent times being in the 50th issue of JMS' run where Spider-Man saves his life from a terrorist attack when [[ARareSentence Peter, MJ, Captain America and Doom were all stranded at the Denver Airport on account of a storm]].
** One of Spider-Man's all-time greatest battles with any villain was with the Juggernaut, an X-Men villain, in ''Amazing Spider-Man'' #229–230. This battle got a sequel during the Grim Hunt arc. Then later, Spider-Man fought Firelord, a former Herald of Galactus, who was a villain of ''The Avengers'' in ASM #269-270. Both villains were intended
needs to establish Spider-Man as the ultimate underdog, battling enemies beyond his wheelhouse, and defeating them on his own when usually they gave both the X-Men and the Avengers problems and needed wrap up a super-team to take them down.
** Shriek started off fighting ComicBook/CloakAndDagger but more commonly fights Spidey since, due to their relative obscurity compared to Spidey. She's also well-known as Carnage's girlfriend.
** As of ''Dark Reign'', Norman Osborn has become an archenemy of the entire Earth-based Marvel universe, second only to Doctor Doom before being downgraded and returning to Spider-Man's titles in Dan Slott's run.
** Beetle IV, or Lady Beetle, started out fighting ComicBook/CaptainAmerica before
fight quickly being moved to Spidey's corner.
** Shocker has been a consistent Spidey villain, outside of his stints with the Masters of Evil and the Thunderbolts. As of 2018, however,
so he can be home before May discovers he's moved to New Jersey and started tangling with [[ComicBook/MsMarvel2014 Kamala Khan]].
** Interestingly, Arcade debuted in ''ComicBook/MarvelTeamUp'', [[TeamUpSeries a series about Spidey teaming up with different heroes]], but quickly became an X-Men villain before antagonizing the Avengers Academy without ever crossing paths with Spider-Man, except for 1992's ''VideoGame/SpiderManAndTheXMenInArcadesRevenge''. In ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManNickSpencer'', he's resurfaced as a Spidey foe once more.
* SaveTheJerk: Nick Spencer had Spidey dealing with the Thieves Guild, normally confined to the X-Men side of the Marvel Universe.
* SchoolyardBullyAllGrownUp: Subverted in that Flash Thompson matured and became a much nicer guy after he graduated from high school and enlisted in the army. His tour of duty made him a much more intelligent and introspective character.
* ScreensAreCameras: The earliest versions of the Spider-Slayer robots worked this way. The robots, piloted remotely by J. Jonah Jameson, would seem to have no technological need to project JJJ's face onto a TV screen mounted on the robot's "head," but that's exactly what they do.
* SecondFaceSmoke: J. Jonah Jameson does this a lot; Spidey has found ways of reversing it on him once in a while.
* ShoutOut: Probably the most of any Marvel character outside of ComicBook/{{Deadpool}}, as Spider-Man's quippy nature and [[JustForFun/OneOfUs slight geekiness]] makes these easy. It goes far enough that at one point when he shows up in ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'', and the characters begin to say "Look! It's--" he interrupts with "That's right... [[{{Catchphrase}} I'm]] ComicBook/{{Batman}}."
* SickEpisode: Quite a few over the years, invariably right before a major opponent shows up. Kraven the Hunter is a good example. The most famous is probably Spider-Man having a cold ComicBook/TheNightGwenStacyDied.
* SkyscraperMessages: A 1970s story has the Shocker doing this with whole city blocks as part of an extortion scheme. Unsurprisingly, a later story has [[PsychoElectro Electro]] doing the same thing.
* SkySurfing: The Green Goblin and Hobgoblin can do this with their respective Goblin Gliders.
* SpiderLimbs:
** Firstly, there's arch enemy ComicBook/DoctorOctopus.
** Then there's the PoweredArmour [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark]] gives Spider-Man in the ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}''.
** There's also Midnight Sons rogue Spider-X, who has boney spider-limbs.
** Pre-dating the ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}'' Iron Spider armor, a possible future Spider-Man was shown to be a genius with PoweredArmor using a similar system to Doc Ock's. Interestingly, the future Goblin serving as his nemesis had equivalent technology on ''her'' armor as well.
** Spider-Man once had a teenage fanboy who built himself a set of mechanical spider legs and tried to become Spidey's sidekick. Since he was a clumsy, [[GeekPhysique out-of-shape]] teenager with no combat experience, it was a good thing that Spider-Man was able to talk him out of it before he hurt himself. A few years later, he reemerged as the Steel Spider, having gotten into shape and learned some hand-to-hand fighting ability in the interim. After beating up some guys who'd attacked his girlfriend, he decided to hang up the costume but then reemerged during the ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}'' on the anti-registration side. His super-hero career apparently ended when he fought the Thunderbolts and Venom bit off and [[IAmAHumanitarian ate]] one of his arms and he was imprisoned in the Negative Zone.
** The ComicBook/SuperiorSpiderMan has added similar waldoes to his second costume. [[spoiler:Makes sense, since he's actually ComicBook/DoctorOctopus [[GrandTheftMe after stealing Spidey's body and life]].]] They are destroyed during the [[GrandFinale "Goblin Nation"]] arc.
** The third and fourth ComicBook/SpiderWoman both possessed these at different points. Originally they were a power of Charlotte Witter (Spider-Woman IV), as a result of [[LegoGenetics genetic manipulation]] by Doc Ock. After a lot of back-and-forth [[AllYourPowersCombined power-stealing]], the limbs -- [[SuperpowerLottery along with the other powers of all three other "Spider-Women"]] -- ended up with Mattie Franklin (Spider-Woman III).
** This has happened to Spidey before, but he managed to cure his condition thanks to the help of Dr. Curt Connors (a.k.a. the Lizard).
* StatuesqueStunner: Stunner, who's over seven feet tall and looks like a bodybuilder in skintight leotard. True to her name, she is described as breathtakingly beautiful, and in her first appearances, brags about how beautiful she is to some patrons at a bar, who judging by the smiles on their faces, didn't disagree. It's later revealed that the reason why she's so beautiful is because she's actually a [[HardLight virtual reality construct]] (tangible hologram) controlled by Angelina Brancale. Angelina is an obese woman who wanted to be thin and beautiful, so Doctor Octopus, another Spider-Man villain and her lover at the time, gave her a machine that allowed her to be Stunner.
* UselessSpleen: In the novel ''The Venom Factor'', Venom states that when he finds whoever is responsible for the murders (that Venom is being wrongly accused of) he will eat his spleen. Spider-Man comments that this is an odd choice of organ to target and that Venom likely doesn't even know where someone's spleen is.
* VerySpecialEpisode: Spider-Man has been a very popular character for very special episodes. Select {{narm}}-filled issues show our hero:
** Saving a young boy from being molested by his female babysitter [[http://www.misterkitty.org/extras/stupidcovers/superhero2.jpg by telling the tale about how he was molested as a kid by an adult friend named "Skip", who had an uncanny resemblance to Uncle Ben]]. Marvel has stated, however, that the story is not canon.
** Foiling a plot to [[http://scans-daily.dreamwidth.org/1333192.html inflict the youth of America with teen pregnancy by giving advice about sexuality.]]
** Saving a stoner from jumping off a building. [[http://wolkin.com/2010/04/152/why-am-i-doing-this-fastlane-commentary-part-1/ This mess]] was actually paid for with tax dollars, mind you.
** Teamed up with ComicBook/{{Storm}} and ComicBook/LukeCage to combat Smokescreen. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNsDvrU-fkA Guess what this one is about]]
** Teaming up with the Rangers and a paraplegic superheroine to teach the Calgary Stampede a lesson about road safety.
** Spider-Man is also known for one of the better Very Special Episodes. Creator/StanLee was asked to write a very special episode about drugs by the government, and, instead of creating a LongLostUncleAesop to focus the story on, he chose to use an existing character, with bonus points for being a rich white male with known emotional issues. UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode then [[IdiotBall refused to approve the comic]], which was the beginning of the end for the CCA.
** All these various issues would later be collected in a TPB "Spider-Man Vs. Substance Abuse".
* VileVulture: Adrian "The Vulture" Toomes is a villain who stylizes himself as a vulture to rob banks and to kill Spider-Man.
* VillainTakesAnInterest: The Green Goblin, especially since he's disappointed in the offspring.
* WalkingWasteland: Carrion and Styx.
* WolverinePublicity:
** As Marvel's BreakoutCharacter, Spider-Man became the company mascot and in the early issues often appeared in multiple titles, predating Wolverine by more than a decade having passed even Wolverine and Deadpool in over-saturation as he is now either a member or guest-starring with the three big teams in the Marvel Universe--including the X-Men, the Avengers (both teams), and the new ComicBook/FantasticFour (known as the FF); plus his own book is released twice a month.
** Interestingly in Spider-Man's early issues, the Fantastic Four made appearances to boost the newcoming Spider-Man's popularity. The Human Torch made campus speeches in Peter's school, and Dr. Doom became the first Marvel wide villain Spider-Man tussled with.
** Recent comics have seen Spider-Man fall into Iron Man's orbit around the time he was getting his big push in the movies. He, Aunt May, and MJ moved in Stark Tower, Peter wore a suit designed by Tony Stark (Iron Spider), joined his side during the ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}} (before switching over to Team Cap midway) and in recent comics, Peter has even become Iron Man-lite in that he runs his own business and claims to be Spider-Man's employer and backer, while MJ actually transitioned from his supporting cast into Tony's for a while.
* WomanlinessAsPathos: Gwen Stacy is a constant source of angst and turmoil for Peter, resulting in the circumstances her death being retreaded several times throughout publication, as well as many stories that resulted directly from her death or the events immediately leading up to them. For example, The Clone Saga started when StalkerWithACrush Miles Warren cloned both her and Peter Parker as revenge for Peter letting the object of his affection die. The story ''Sins Past'' revealed more details about her past, including that [[spoiler:she cheated on him with his archenemy ComicBook/NormanOsborn and bore two children.]]
* {{Wring Every Last Drop Out Of H|im}}er: Aunt May has been on the verge of death for ''four decades''.
* {{Yandere}}: The Venom Symbiote for Spider-Man.
* YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre: For all of his strength and speed, Peter beats himself up to the extreme whenever he fails to save someone, or even when people get hurt while he's fighting one or many supervillains, so he has to be reminded of this at times, usually by Mary Jane, but sometimes by people like Logan or Captain America.
gone.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* IApprovedThisMessage: In ''Amazing Spider-Man'' #611, ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} claims to have ''ComicBook/BlackestNight'' symbols on his toenails ("My feet are a rainbow of power!") with a footnote reading "I'm Creator/GeoffJohns and I approve this message -- Creator/GeoffJohns, former ''[[ComicBook/TheAvengers Avengers]]'' writer".



** Lampshaded in "The Amazing Spider-Man #46", Just as Spider-Man is wondering where to start looking for The Shocker (A vibration based villain) He spots a cop in a police call box reporting strange tremors, causing Peter to say.
---> Spider-Man: "Boy! if it had happened that easy in a movie, I'd say it was too phony!"



* PostMortemComeback: The entire robot-disguised-as-parents plan was set in motion by Harry Osborn (Green Goblin II) some time before his death. It gets even better because while Harry eventually forgave Spider-Man and moved on, the last time he was seen (prior to One More Day) was here, on a videotape he'd made, gloating over an enraged Spider-Man.



* SiblingFusion: Amazing Spider-Man Vol 1. Issue #208 introduces twin brothers Hubert and Pinky Fusser. Both worked at the same company but in different professions; Hubert was a scientist while Pinky was a janitor. An accident occurs during one of Hubert's experiments causing the two brothers to merge together into a being known as Fusion the Twin Terror.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* AsideComment: The cover of ''The Spectacular Spider-Man'' #246 has 4 bizarre looking villains called the Legion of Losers. It also has Spider-Man turning to look at the reader and saying "You've gotta be kidding!". See it [[http://superdickery.com/images/stories/stupor/spec2463cq.jpg here]].



* BlowGun: A group of one-time villains (four criminals who learned to copy Vulture's wings) use those. The curare is fatal for humans -- Spider-Man is too tough to die, but gets stiffer with every dart and actually comes close to succumbing. The next issue, he has to save their lives when the real Vulture came to town.



* DemandOverload: In universe. When Spider-Man publicly revealed his secret identity, the Internet broke down because too many people were trying to do a name search on "Peter Parker" simultaneously.



* DramaticDislocation: He once did this in order to put a ''dislocated jaw'' back into place after battling Hammerhead. Proportionate strength of a spider + metal garbage bin = ''ow''.



* IfIHadANickel: Spidey responding to a threat made by the Green Goblin during the "Goblins at the Gate" arc.
-->'''Spider-Man:''' Goblin, if I had a nickel for every time I heard a threat like that... well, I'd be one very rich friendly neighborhood Spider-Man.
* IronicNickname: Tom Taylor's first issue in Volume 2 of ''Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man'' {{Lampshades}} the fact that Spider-Man is a ''Spider-themed'' hero, when after Spidey saves a little girl and her father, the small child slaps his spider emblem on his chest out of her dislike for spiders:
-->'''Spider-Man:''' It's all good to be fair, I don't exactly have the most kid-friendly costume. It literally has a spider on it.



* {{Kayfabe}}: The comics treated the fight between Peter and the wrestler as real; GrandfatherClause meant that the first movie followed this as well, though it was explained in issue #14 of ''Spider-Man's Tangled Web'' that Crusher Hogan was actually a "shoot" wrestler--in which the outcome of the match is not scripted.



* PatiencePlot: In an early story, a character called the Hitman had been given a contract to kill Spidey. The Vulture gets involved, and the Hitman tags both Spider-Man and the Vulture with a tracer so he can track them down. Later, looking at a tracking screen in his hideout:
-->'''Hitman:''' Both Spidey and Vulture's blibs are stationary. Looks like they've both settled in for the night. Only thing to do now is wait. ''[sits at a table and starts cleaning his guns]'' Waiting. That's something I could ''never'' teach them back in the old days. Either they were naturals who knew it instinctively, or they never learned... and died because of it. So simple. You wait. And then, you strike.



* WrestlingMonster: Played straight with MaskedLuchador El Muerte. Played with when wrestling god El Diablo shows up. [[PiratesWhoDontDoAnything He never appears in the ring of any promotions and fights with swords.]]

Changed: 2677

Removed: 27821

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* TenMinuteRetirement: Occasionally Spidey will get sick and tired of [[WakeUpGoToSchoolSaveTheWorld juggling the demands of heroics and ordinary life]] for the benefit of [[HeroWithBadPublicity an unappreciative world]] and hang up the web-shooters until something spurs him into action again. Inverted in the mid-90's story "Peter Parker No More", in which Spider-Man suffers a mental breakdown after one emotional hit too many, and decides to all but give up his civilian identity, spending all his time in costume.

to:

* TenMinuteRetirement: Occasionally Spidey will get sick and tired of [[WakeUpGoToSchoolSaveTheWorld juggling the demands of heroics and ordinary life]] for the benefit of [[HeroWithBadPublicity an unappreciative world]] and hang up the web-shooters until something spurs him into action again. Inverted in the mid-90's story "Peter Parker No More", in which Spider-Man suffers a mental breakdown after one emotional hit too many, and decides to all but give up his civilian identity, spending all his time in costume.



* AlertnessBlink: Most times the spider-sense activates. The thick, tapering wavy lines around his head are one of the most famous examples of this in the west.

to:

* AlertnessBlink: Most times AdaptationPersonalityChange: Future retellings, across several mediums, of Peter’s days just short of becoming Spider-Man have made him a more pure-hearted person from the spider-sense activates. The thick, tapering wavy lines around get-go, while also making him far more willing to forgive and work with his head are one of the most famous examples of this former enemies after becoming Spider-Man. However, in the west.original Stan Lee and Steve Ditko run, it was quite evident that Peter was more of an irritable teenager, a good guy yes, but not an ideal pure hero, which gave weight to Peter’s immediate decision of trying to make money as soon as he got super powers instead of trying to be a hero right away; it was only after much hard-earned experiences that Peter grew to be up a fantastically heroic person.



* AllOfTheOtherReindeer: Peter got bullied in high school because he was a nerd; meanwhile, Spider-Man gets treated like a criminal by the same media that worships all of the other super-heroes and in the case of J. Jonah Jameson, him treating mutants (the feared and hated minority of the Marvel Universe) better than he does Spider-Man. Ironically because of this, Spider-Man has traditionally been a huge supporter and ally of the X-Men.
* AllWebbedUp: Peter created a set of wrist-mounted webshooters on his own in one of the clearest displays of scientific genius on his part. The formula for his webs in particular is nothing short of miraculous, given its tensile strength and adhesive properties. It disappears after a couple hours or so, so he doesn't even leave a mess. For a time after his first encounter with the Queen up to One More Day, Peter underwent a secondary mutation that gave him organic web shooters that functioned in much the same way as his artificial ones. [[SwissArmySuperpower There is little he can't do with his webs]]. Possibly justified -- in real life, spiders do tend to be pretty brilliant with them.



* AnimalThemedFightingStyle:
** The hero's rogues gallery contains several enemies who follow this pattern to go with their animal motifs. In fact, for a time this was almost the only type of foe Spidey fought. Rhino, Vulture, Doctor Octopus, Kangaroo, Scorpion, Leap Frog, Puma, and Razorback are a very short list of villains who, through one method or another, tend to fight using the same kinds of attacks and tactics as the animals they're patterned after. How effective this is varies.
** In Dan Slott's run, Spider-Man's SpiderSense was temporarily disabled. To compensate for this, Peter underwent martial arts training from Shang Chi to develop a fighting style called "Way of the Spider" which focused on spider-like strength and reflexes.
* AnimalThemedSuperbeing: Peter is Spider-Man and can crawl on walls and adhere to any surface and any angle, he also has the proportional strength of a spider, a special spider-sense, and the agility and flexibility of a spider, or one enhanced genetically. Over time, it has been established that Peter didn't entirely win the SuperpowerLottery, and that's why he only has ''some'' spider-based powers and not the much larger library he could have. This has also been used to help differentiate some of his {{Legacy Character}}s, giving them certain unique powers whilst still preserving the fundamental theme of being a Spider-Hero.

to:

* AnimalThemedFightingStyle:
**
AnimalThemedFightingStyle: The hero's rogues gallery contains several enemies who follow this pattern to go with their animal motifs. In fact, for a time this was almost the only type of foe Spidey fought. Rhino, Vulture, Doctor Octopus, Kangaroo, Scorpion, Leap Frog, Puma, and Razorback are a very short list of villains who, through one method or another, tend to fight using the same kinds of attacks and tactics as the animals they're patterned after. How effective this is varies.
** In Dan Slott's run, Spider-Man's SpiderSense was temporarily disabled. To compensate for this, Peter underwent martial arts training from Shang Chi to develop a fighting style called "Way of the Spider" which focused on spider-like strength and reflexes.
* AnimalThemedSuperbeing: Peter is Spider-Man and can crawl on walls and adhere to any surface and any angle, he also has the proportional strength of a spider, a special spider-sense, and the agility and flexibility of a spider, or one enhanced genetically. Over time, it has been established that Peter didn't entirely win the SuperpowerLottery, and that's why he only has ''some'' spider-based powers and not the much larger library he could have. This has also been used to help differentiate some of his {{Legacy Character}}s, giving them certain unique powers whilst still preserving the fundamental theme of being a Spider-Hero.
varies.



* TheAnticipator: Spidey is fond of abusing his Spider-Sense for this purpose; he can sense when someone, especially an enemy someone, is coming, and can quickly set up a nice little alleyway confrontation with them. Or simply just not be surprised when someone's behind him; his Spider-Sense averts this trope happening fully to him for the same reason of his power being able to sense when someone hostile is lurking about (unless it's Venom, whom the Spider-Sense cannot detect).



* ArmoredVillainsUnarmoredHeroes: Spider-Man, pretty much an archetypal skintight-suit superhero, periodically though not invariably goes up against armored opponents of various kinds, such as the Rhino or assorted Spider-Slayer robots. Though he averts this on occasion, building specialized suits or even PowerArmor to deal with specific foes (notably, in Ends Of The Earth, he built essentially Spider-Man themed Iron Man armor specifically designed to take on the latest iteration of the Sinister Six).



* BadassBookworm: Spider-Man is a superhumanly skilled acrobat with danger-based precognition and superhuman strength and resiliency (including an ability to block out pain better than ordinary humans). He's also got a high I.Q. and a natural affinity for science.



* BettyAndVeronica: See the Alternate Name, "Gwen And Mary Jane". Later, "Mary Jane and Felicia".
* BewareTheNiceOnes:
** Spidey is entirely well-meaning, but in times of severe stress and/or provocation (such as Gwen Stacy's death), he will often fly into UnstoppableRage, which invariably ends very painfully for the target of that rage. Basically, when he's not wisecracking, the villains had best ''watch out''.
** [[ComicBook/{{Wolverine}} Logan]] once made some [[MyGirlIsNotASlut insensitive remarks about Mary Jane.]] In response, Pete put Logan through [[ComicBook/IronMan Mr. Stark's]] "unbreakable" glass windows [[DestinationDefenestration from the umpteenth floor]]. GoodThingYouCanHeal indeed.
** ''WebVideo/SuperPowerBeatdown'' showed perfectly how dangerous Spidey can be. During his fight with Darth Maul, he uses his Spider Sense and agility to constantly dodge ''a Force user's lightsaber attacks''. However, when the Symbiote bonds with Spidey again, TheGlovesComeOff and it doesn't take Spidey ''three'' seconds to use his senses and agility to have Maul cut off his own head.



* BigDamnHeroes: Spider-Man has been on both sides of this trope, either showing up at the last minute to pull off an amazing rescue (''Amazing Spider-Man'' #261 is just one of many examples), or being bailed out by his superhero buddies, such as when the Sinister Twelve were about to kill him.
* BigGood: Downplayed. Although ComicBook/CaptainAmerica is the Marvel Universe's Big Good, Spider-Man has proven to have the potential of being as effective a leader as he is and in rare occasions shows more innocence and purity than Steve. If Steve is the Marvel Universe's [[TheParagon Soul]], then Peter is definitely the [[IncorruptiblePurePureness Heart]]. His idealism, which often rivals Cap's obviously, is powerful enough to unite the most cynical of heroes and loathsome villains together and/or bring out the best in them. If he wasn't a HeroWithBadPublicity, he might have fulfilled this trope a long time ago.
** Very much downplayed in the greater scheme of things since he [[DependingOnTheWriter tends to be]] one of the younger heroes on display. To make up for that fact, it is commonly acknowledged that he is extraordinarily experienced as a superhero, especially so for his age. Since he started at 15-16 or so, he has spent at least a decade, including his formative years, fighting evil on a nearly constant basis. Hence comes the wisdom of handing him the reins in a pinch.
** In any series that takes place in the future -- particularly if it's one that involves successor superheroes, this is taken to its logical conclusion. Most of these timelines depict any heroes' response to Peter as one of reverence -- a living legend whose only equal is MU's other living legend (Captain America). And as in his nature, he downplays his importance, though with enough wisdom to use that respect to help younger heroes.



* BreakingTheFourthWall: Not quite as much as [[ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} Marvel's]] [[ComicBook/SquirrelGirl usual]] [[ComicBook/SheHulk examples]], but [[http://segamarvel.deviantart.com/art/Bonified-4th-wall-breaker-419114915 occasionally]].



* BrilliantButLazy: Peter is a genius that can reasonably be compared to the likes of [[ComicBook/AntMan Hank Pym]], [[ComicBook/IronMan Tony Stark]], [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Bruce Banner]] and [[ComicBook/FantasticFour Reed Richards]], but far more than simply being a case of ReedRichardsIsUseless, his only notable inventions are the webslinger and webs, waaay back at the start of his career. He spends most of his time fighting bad guys rather than doing sciencey stuff, which he usually only employs to fight whatever bad guy is making trouble on any particular day. Though the latest CrisisCrossover has left him with his own company, Stark Industries à la mode, so he may be inching towards subverting this trope.\\\
While Parker Industries is doing quite well as a company, it was created by the Superior Spider-Man, a.k.a. Doc Ock in Peter's body. Since Peter has taken over the reins (of the body and the company), he's usually much more interested in getting away and Spider-Manning rather than being a scientist or businessman. Even when PI produces nifty gadgets or socially-conscious initiatives, it's more a case of Peter saying "Invent this thing, anonymous science lackeys."
* BuildingSwing: Spider-Man's usual mode of travel around the city, natch.



* CameraSniper: Common, but most of the time it's Peter Parker's own camera on auto-shutter taking the pictures of Spidey in action. But not always.
* CanAlwaysSpotACop: Spidey goes hot and cold with this trope. He doesn't really encounter police officers except when they're trying to arrest him, or when he's swinging in to give them a hand. Peter is observant and intelligent enough to pick up subtle clues that someone is a cop, but not consistently. His Spider-Sense does sometimes warn him that someone is carrying a gun, but that's only when they have hostile intentions towards him. Therefore it normally doesn't ping on undercover cops that he's around either in his civilian identity or as Spider-Man, since they don't usually have any hostile intentions towards him in either guise.



* ChronicHeroSyndrome: Justified in that he blames himself for his inaction with Uncle Ben when he could have saved him just by stopping the robber earlier, he takes this to the logical extreme and even other superheroes think he needs a vacation at times.
* ClarkKentOutfit: Numerous people are surprised to note that the scrawny-looking 'Puny Parker' has "muscles like a ''weightlifter's''" under his clothes.
* ClimbSlipHangClimb: Ordinarily, this never happens to Spider-Man for obvious reasons, but it does turn up in stories where he loses one or more of his powers and has to fake it.
* CloningBlues: [[ShapedLikeItself Let's start with]] ComicBook/TheCloneSaga.



* ClothesMakeTheLegend: Even the black suit retained the form.



** Spidey himself gets a ComicBook/IronMan-esque suit of armor, greatly enhancing his powers. In this suit, he's called "Iron Spider".
*** More than once. The first was a silver and blue one that evaporated in water. Then there was the one from Stark that could shapeshift, and we have a new one coming.



* ComicBookTime: Peter was 15 when he got his spider powers in 1962. Come 2014, he's 28 in-universe.



* CurbStompBattle: While Spider-Man's strength is not high end, he is a lot stronger than he was originally, and his mix of speed, agility, and reflexes are debatably the best outside of speedsters. His webs, jumping, and wall-crawling give him mobility only surpassed by flyers and teleporters, with his webbing also providing surprisingly versatile ranged combat options. When you combine all that with his spider-sense (which gives him an enormous advantage in battle), you've pretty much got a nearly unbeatable combination. He holds back so much because he probably spends more time than any other hero except Daredevil just dealing with ordinary criminals committing street crimes, and he's genuinely afraid of killing someone. That being said, most of the people who know him are fully aware of how dangerous he can be when he's really pissed off. Daredevil was nearly unable to prevent him from beating the Sin Eater to death, and the sight of Spider-Man (whom he always known beforehand as being lighthearted and easygoing) being so brutal left a ''serious'' impression on Daredevil. In the 80's, Peter give Doctor Octopus a beating so brutal that Doc has developed a fear of spiders and Spider-Man, one that would last for a few years. In ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'', he outfought the entire starting line-up of the X-Men. Later in that same series, he gave such a vicious beating to Titania that she avoided any chance of coming into contact with him for years. Even Wolverine, a close-quarters combat expert with literally decades of experience and adamantium claws that can slice through flesh and bone with barely any effort, once observed that he would ''not'' want to fight Peter in a serious match-up.



** Our dashing hero normally makes YouFightLikeACow remarks, which never fails to piss off his enemies -- and he very well knows this.

to:

** Our dashing hero Spider-Man normally makes YouFightLikeACow remarks, which never fails to piss off his enemies -- and he very well knows this.



* {{Determinator}}: No matter how hard he gets beat down, or how bad his life can get, Peter ''never'' gives up. He's the page image for the Comic Book section of this trope ''for a reason''.



* DoomMagnet: ''Nothing'' goes right for Peter. Whether he's wearing the mask or not, his life always ends up being a downward spiral of misery, something he dubs "Parker luck".
* DorkInASweater: Peter Parker often wore sweaters before being bitten by the spider. He rarely does after until it gets cold (New York remember).



** Rarely, ''Spider-Man himself'' can fall victim to this, being too preoccupied with his own thoughts to pay attention to his Spider-Sense warning him he's about to get blind-sided. Those times he's been deprived of his Spider-Sense, he falls into this fairly constantly, since he's come to rely on it so much, even in his everyday life.
-->'''Peter:''' I haven't had to look both ways before crossing the street since I was a sophmore!



* FriendlessBackground; In Peter's original appearance he had no friends unless you count Liz who was nice to him on occasion, and Betty who was his girlfriend until he got to college. But he notably never really had a confidant to share his secret identity with, unlike Batman (who had Alfred and Robin) or Superman (who had Ma and Pa Kent). For a long time, it was only his villains (the Osborns, Miles Warren) who knew his secret, which increased Peter's sense of vulnerability, isolation, and made his social life tense and painful (since people around him inevitably saw him as aloof, distant, slightly asocial and undependable). In AlternateContinuity, such as ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'', this is dialed down with Peter having Ultimate MJ as his friend from childhood and confiding in her his secret early in his run, which carried over in ''Film/TheAmazingSpiderManSeries'' and ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming'' where Peter's no longer entirely alone.
* FriendlyNeighborhoodSpider: Invoked with Spider-Man, a superhero with a [[AnimalThemedSuperbeing spider-theme]], who also has the RedBaron of being "[[TropeNamer Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man]]", usually being nice to people and being the savior of New York countless times. Also, this is extended to various of his spider-allies as well as his AlternateContinuities alter-ego (as well as his allies like ComicBook/SpiderGwen).



* FromZeroToHero: Spider-Man was just a scrawny teenager named Peter Parker until he was bitten by a radioactive spider. Gifted with a platter of spider-based powers, he eventually becomes one of the most recognized (if not always respected) superheroes in the world.
* FuzzballSpider: DependingOnTheArtist, Spidey's costume usually has a sharply-defined spider as the chest emblem, but the spider on the back is much less anatomically correct as the legs are shown attached to the abdomen instead of the cephalothorax.
* GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke: Modern versions of the story typically have the spider that bites Peter be genetically engineered rather than radioactive.
* GeneticMemory: Every {{clon|ingBlues}}e of Peter will invariably have his memories.
* GeniusBruiser: Spider-Man is one of the highest skilled students in his schools, and with spider-DNA in his blood he can beat the ''piss'' out of foes. In fact, he's a rare case of the genius LightningBruiser but without the size.

to:

* FromZeroToHero: Spider-Man was just a scrawny teenager named Peter Parker until he was bitten by a radioactive spider. Gifted with a platter of spider-based powers, he eventually becomes one of the most recognized (if not always respected) superheroes in the world.
* FuzzballSpider: DependingOnTheArtist, Spidey's costume usually has a sharply-defined spider as the chest emblem, but the spider on the back is much less anatomically correct as the legs are shown attached to the abdomen instead of the cephalothorax.
* GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke: Modern versions of the story typically have the spider that bites Peter be genetically engineered rather than radioactive. \n* GeneticMemory: Every {{clon|ingBlues}}e of Peter will invariably have his memories.\n* GeniusBruiser: Spider-Man is one of the highest skilled students in his schools, and with spider-DNA in his blood he can beat the ''piss'' out of foes. In fact, he's a rare case of the genius LightningBruiser but without the size.



* TheGimmick: Spidey possesses several: The Spider theme, the quick wit, and, out of universe, JustForFun/OneOfUs.



* HatesMySecretIdentity: It is a staple of any version of that franchise that Flash Thompson will bully Peter Parker while admiring Spider-Man. Also the case for Gwen Stacy who liked Peter but hated Spider-Man.
* HeroWithBadPublicity: Nearly every single adaptation shows Spidey as this, mostly thanks to J. Jonah Jameson's MaliciousSlander.



* IdiotBall: Spider-Man is tossed one of these nearly any time he is taken by surprise by an attack, considering that his comic named the trope for [[SpiderSense the ability to sense when something potentially dangerous is about to happen.]]
** It makes sense considering that the SpiderSense is not infallible. Pete has misinterpreted it at times and been too distracted or in too bad of a condition to pick up on it clearly at other times. It is danger precognition... not omniscience. At one point it was triggered by his own sneezing when he was suffering a truly awful cold.



* IronicNickname: Something that is lost on account of Spider-Man's fame, but Spider-Man's nickname as "the Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man" is a major one since before most people saw spiders as [[SpidersAreScary creepy house pests]]. Spiders aren't supposed to be part of a neighborhood and certainly not part of a friendly one, or be considered friendly themselves. Peter being your friendly neighborhood spider-man inverts that completely. Tom Taylor's first issue in Volume 2 of ''Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man'' {{Lampshades}} this when after Spidey saves a little girl and her father, the small child slaps his spider emblem on his chest out of her dislike for spiders:

to:

* IronicNickname: Something that is lost on account of Spider-Man's fame, but Spider-Man's nickname as "the Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man" is a major one since before most people saw spiders as [[SpidersAreScary creepy house pests]]. Spiders aren't supposed to be part of a neighborhood and certainly not part of a friendly one, or be considered friendly themselves. Peter being your friendly neighborhood spider-man inverts that completely. Tom Taylor's first issue in Volume 2 of ''Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man'' {{Lampshades}} this the fact that Spider-Man is a ''Spider-themed'' hero, when after Spidey saves a little girl and her father, the small child slaps his spider emblem on his chest out of her dislike for spiders:



* JackOfAllStats: Spidey isn't the strongest hero, or the fastest, or the smartest. However, he's usually stronger ''or'' faster ''or'' smarter than any given opponent, and clever enough to leverage whatever advantages he has to victory.



* KeepingSecretsSucks: Just ask him yourself. Contrary to what other superheroes make it look like, a dual identity is ''very'' hard to manage even if you keep it for years.



* LetsYouAndHimFight: Most new and old Marvel characters have fought Spidey at least once.



* LogicalWeakness: The Spider-Sense alerts him of danger, but it does not tell him ''why'' something is dangerous. Sometimes his foes have taken advantage of this by presenting an obvious danger so he does not notice a subtle one at the same time.



* LoserProtagonist: Part of the appeal is that, rather than being a millionaire playboy or any other kind of extra-awesome person that other superheroes are, Peter's a normal guy that has to deal with the same mundane problems as anyone else.



* TheMasqueradeWillKillYourDatingLife: There is hardly a time where he ''is not'' faced with this dilemma. Even at an adult age.



* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: When he recognizes the murderer of his uncle as the man he allowed to escape earlier.
* NeverMyFault: A lot of folks blame poor Spidey for things they are to blame for themselves.
* NewTechIsNotCheap: One of Spidey's major plots is his budgetary restrictions on the expensive chemicals for his web shooters.



* OutsideRide: Spidey often uses this technique, particularly when he needs a longer-ranged or faster mode of travel than his usual web-swinging. His powerset (superhuman reflexes and leaping ability to catch a ride and clinging ability to hang on) makes it fairly easy for him.



* PersonalHorror: The origin story involves this, as Uncle Ben's death is indirectly caused by Peter's irresponsibility.



* PopularityPower: How Spidey gets to beat the ''really'' tough villains and heroes. Somewhat justified by the fact that, as pointed out on this page, when he really goes all-out, he's a ''lot'' more capable and dangerous than he seems to be at first glance. Also why Mary Jane Watson remains the most iconic of all of Peter's girlfriends no matter what writers and editors do; even Creator/StanLee couldn't manage to do anything about it.



* PronouncingMyNameForYou: Spider-Man goes out of his way to point out you gotta "pronounce" the hyphen so it's two words ("Spider-Man") and tends to get up in arms whenever someone pronounces it as one whole word ("Spiderman"). Apparently, it makes it seem like a Jewish last name or something to that effect.
* ProWrestlingIsReal: When Spider-Man first got his powers, he entered a wrestling tournament and beat a wrestler by the name of Crusher Hogan. Interestingly enough, Crusher came back years later, publicly stated that wrestling was fake, and that he [[BlatantLies purposefully threw the fight to Spidey.]]



* SaveTheJerk: Spider-Man has often found himself coming to J. Jonah Jameson's rescue due to the latter being a target of supervillains, [[CreateYourOwnVillain some of which were created by Jameson himself]]. Despite this, [[UngratefulBastard Jameson rarely, if ever thanks the Wall-Crawler]] and is more likely to continue his crusade against the hero than admit he is wrong about Spider-Man.
** Nick Spencer has also had Spidey dealing with the Thieves Guild, normally confined to the X-Men side of the Marvel Universe.

to:

* SaveTheJerk: Spider-Man has often found himself coming to J. Jonah Jameson's rescue due to the latter being a target of supervillains, [[CreateYourOwnVillain some of which were created by Jameson himself]]. Despite this, [[UngratefulBastard Jameson rarely, if ever thanks the Wall-Crawler]] and is more likely to continue his crusade against the hero than admit he is wrong about Spider-Man.
**
Nick Spencer has also had Spidey dealing with the Thieves Guild, normally confined to the X-Men side of the Marvel Universe.



* SecondLove: After the death of his original true love, Gwen Stacy, he eventually fell in love with Mary Jane, who is his most well known love interest to this day and defined the concept.
* SecondSuperIdentity: Spider-Man did this as an entire group of heroes. When Spider-Man was accused of murder during the "Identity Crisis" storyline, he temporarily adopted four other costumed identities to allow him to continue fighting crime without appearing as Spider-Man: Hornet, Prodigy, Ricochet and Dusk. Eventually these personae were adopted by other heroes, creating The Slingers.
* SecretIdentity: Spider-Man's identity was originally secret, before the Green Goblin found out. Since then, a handful of Spidey's RoguesGallery have found out that it was Peter Parker, Peter unmasked after proposing to Mary Jane, Aunt May walked in on an unconscious and bloody Peter in costume, and it gradually became an open secret amongst part of the superhero community. Then ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}} came, and Spider-Man publicly unmasked, before ''ComicBook/OneMoreDay'' erased the knowledge of Spider-Man's identity from ''everyone''. Since then, none of his villains have found out his identity, but he has revealed it to the Fantastic Four and the Avengers.
** Kaine still knows, being a clone of Spider-Man. The Jackal also knows, due to his cloning work. And [[spoiler: The Queen knows,]] since the Jackal is working for her.



* {{Sidekick}}:
** Spider-Man was notable as one of the first teenage superheroes to not be a sidekick, but a full-fledged superhero in his own right. In his early run, he did everything on his own, without relying on confidants like Alfred or Robin, making his own web-shooters and doing his own crime research, and enjoying the reputation of being a lone-wolf weirdo among the superhero community. Of course, Spider-Man tried to join a team, the ComicBook/FantasticFour (ComicBook/TheAvengers weren't invented yet) but he got turned down because Reed insisted that they were a family and not a team (years later, he did join the Future Foundation). And despite being offered a place in ComicBook/TheAvengers later on, he turned it down because he felt it would come in the way of helping his Aunt May.
** Though he normally works alone (except during team-ups obviously), writers have entertained the idea of giving Spidey a sidekick of his own, most recent being Alpha, though it never lasts. In his team-up with Comicbook/MilesMorales, the latter played junior partner to him and is presently New York's street-level Spider-Man while Peter is running Parker Industries.
** Spider-Man's non-sidekick status gets diluted a little in AlternateContinuity like ''ComicBook/UltimateMarvel'' and ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse'', where Peter is designated as officially in "apprentice status" to either Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. or to Tony Stark. And in the case of the latter, Spidey has his suit and equipment handed to him by Tony Stark.
** In any superhero team-up, Spider-Man nearly always defers to a senior, whether it's Mister Fantastic, the Thing, Captain America, Wolverine, and especially Iron Man. The exceptions include Daredevil (where they are often equal partners, somewhat echoing the Superman and Batman World's Finest dynamic), but in either case, Spider-Man has never been a team leader.



* SpiderPeople: While Spidey himself generally doesn't qualify, being just a normal-looking human with spiderlike ''powers'', there have been occasions where he mutated further into "Man-Spider", a far more monstrous form somewhere in between a bipedal human and a giant multi-armed spider.
* SpiderSense: The one, the only, the TropeNamer. His ability to sense danger (combined with his enhanced reflexes) make him a difficult target.
* SpidersAreScary: Subverted by his fun-loving wise-cracking personality (unless he's fighting somebody who has ''seriously'' pissed him off). That said, his superhuman athletic moves and ability to catch foes by surprise can inspire fear, particularly among common {{mooks}}.



* {{Superhero}}: Alongside Batman and Superman, Spider-Man is ''the'' archetypical proverbial superhero. He's the TropeMaker and TropeCodifier for modern superhero stories, which explore the impact of their vigilante lives on their social life, and his stories inspired the later direction and characterization undergone by both Batman and Superman (namely failing to protect the ones he love, which became a Batman trope in TheEighties, sharing his secret identity with his love interest and wife, which Superman did with Lois in ''ComicBook/PostCrisis'' but never in the classic era). Likewise Spider-Man was swinging and grappling and parkouring across buildings long before Batman started doing so (having only gotten ''his'' Grappling Hook from the Tim Burton Batman film which seeped into his comics).
* SuperReflexes: Closely coupled with his SpiderSense.
* SuperStrength: Heavily DependingOnTheWriter. Spider-Man has occasionally struggled with much lighter weights, and on other occasions has achieved far greater feats. Spider-Man can go from struggling to match Daredevil or Captain America (who are a lot weaker, Daredevil in particular isn't even in the Superhuman range, though they are more skilled fighters and Peter holds back) or struggling to stop a limo with the help of Luke Cage to supporting a portion of the Daily Bugle. Regardless, it is generally accepted that Spider-Man is stronger than the likes of Captain America and ComicBook/{{Wolverine}}. ComicBook/TheMightyThor has confessed that Spider-Man boasts vast strength for a mortal.
* SurpriseJump: In his first appearance (and many subsequent presentations of his [[SuperheroOrigin origin story]]), Peter discovers his powers when, distracted by the odd sensations he feels after the spider bite, he nearly gets hit by a car -- and reflexively leaps halfway across the street to find himself clinging to the side of a building.
* UpbringingMakesTheHero: Thanks to Uncle Ben and Aunt May.
** To drive the point home: in ''ComicBook/BulletPoints'', the very same upbringing sans Uncle Ben (and, therefore, without a fatherly figure) resulted in Peter being ''a total jerk'' instead.
* UnluckyEverydude: This is just putting it very lightly for Peter. He isn't just unlucky, but his poor luck almost [[DoomMagnet seems to seep onto anyone he meets.]]



* WaifFu: For all that Spider-Man is a full-blown LightningBruiser by any human measure his agility and combat precognition lends itself to this fighting style. It is especially noticeable when the wiry fellow of middling height deals with massive behemoths that seriously outclass him in the bruiser category.



* WallCrawl: Spidey may actually be the TropeNamer for this trope -- "Wall-Crawler" has been one of his nicknames for decades.



* TheWorfEffect: Seems to get knocked around by his enemies more often than other heroes. Then again, he usually comes back to win, so the Effect isn't as bad as it otherwise would be.
** If anything, you could argue it's an inversion: Spidey gets knocked around all the time (and often fights enemies who are much stronger and/or larger than he is) to show that he's weak and spindly. But wins anyway.
** If there is a "standard formula" to a Spider-Man story, it's this: Spidey meets a new villain (or old villain with new and/or improved powers), gets his ass kicked, comes up with a scientific solution to neutralize the baddy's advantage, then delivers a CurbStompBattle. Probably the best example of this, in prolonged format, is the Spider Island event. If Spidey isn't triumphing after total defeat through science and ingenuity, he's probably doing it through HeroicResolve and being TheDeterminator.
* WorfHadTheFlu: It's quite common for Spidey to come down with some illness for an issue or two which allows a villain to gain the upper hand in a fight. This is usually used to show off his HeroicWillpower by fighting through the illness and he typically loses one fight and then wins the rematch and the illness goes away as soon as he gets back home.
* WorkingClassHero: One of the many reasons why Peter Parker was such a fresh character from its beginnings. He very believably came across a poor scholarship boy whose daily pressures (education, being an orphan, having elderly guardians) was already a strain before his super-powers. It's also there in his identity as a "Friendly Neighbourhood Spider-Man" and a SmallStepsHero. This aspect tends to be toned down some adaptations (with the excepting of [The Spectacular Spider-Man) and more recent stories.
* WouldntHitAGirl: When he first met Princess Python, Spidey lamented that he couldn't hit her. [[EnforcedTrope It]] ''[[EnforcedTrope was]]'' [[EnforcedTrope the 1960's, after all]]. Later averted with female villains like Moonstone, Shriek, Nebula and Titania, who Spidey doesn't hold back against.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* MythologyGag: The civilian name of Alpha, Spider-Man's sidekick[=/=]protege introduced in issue #692? [[Film/TheAmazingSpiderMan Andrew]] [[Film/SpiderManTrilogy Maguire]].



* NiceJobBreakingItHero: When Spidey's rescuing Alpha from The Jackal, he at one point tries to encourage Alpha to free himself. Unfortunately, he makes the mistake of telling Andy that he'd lose his powers if The Jackal managed to drain them from him, prompting Andy/Alpha to break free and state that he would rather die [[IJustWantToBeSpecial then lose his powers and go back to being a powerless nobody]] like Jackal's failed clones. It's after this incident that he emancipates himself from his parents and strikes out with the family lawyer for bigger fame and profit, and also became even more conceited than he already was. Not quite the result Peter had hoped for.



* PerpetualTourist: In one story, Mysterio's ultimate goal when he takes over the Maggia is to grab as much money as he can, and "buy an island in the tropics where I can sit under palm trees and drink things out of coconuts".



* ThousandYardStare: Andy, immediately after Spider-Man de-powers him.



* UnsoundEffect: A very recent battle with Mysterio gave us "Groing". For a [[GroinAttack groin shot]]. Also counts as a [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments Crowning Moment Of Funny]].

Top