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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/spideysubs.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:[[WesternAnimation/SpiderMan1967 They do whatever a spider (and ladybug) can!]][[note]]L-R, top to bottom: ComicBook/SpiderMan, [[WesternAnimation/MiraculousLadybug Ladybug]] - okay, so not really a spider - , Webcomic/{{Spinnerette}} and [[WesternAnimation/TheVentureBros the Brown Widow]].[[/note]]]]
3
4-> ''"...I'll be as good at web-slinging as New York's Friendly-Neighborhood Dude! With great power comes an even greater costume!"''
5-->-- '''Kumoko''', ''Literature/SoImASpiderSoWhat''
6
7While not the first superhero to exist, ComicBook/SpiderMan is often seen as one of the first heroes to whom comic book readers could relate. [[TheEveryman He's young, he has classes, he has a job, a family that loves him despite the tough times they face]]. A bully, a crush, friends that become his worst enemy, enemies that become the best of friends, and *''gasp''*... ''puberty!'' He's not rich, he's not perfect, [[UnpopularPopularCharacter he's not popular (In-Universe, anyway)]] but that does not stop him from caring with all his heart about the well-being of others doing the right thing.
8
9With his universal popularity in comics, cartoons, video games, and blockbuster movies, imitations are inevitable.
10
11These characters tend to include the following traits:
12* They are usually [[AnimalThemedSuperbeing Animal-Themed]], specifically arthropod-themed (some avoids the spider/arachnid-theme for copyright reasons so they usually go for other bugs instead) or generally small, bouncy animals. Some may go with a completely different theme completely. Their archetypal design are [[TheTrickster The Trickster]] or [[GeniusBruiser Genius Bruiser]] archetype of someone who's generally a [[FragileSpeedster Fragile Speedster]] to villains, unpredictable, and hard to keep go toe-to-toe with.
13* They usually are jokesters, they tend to constantly [[IShallTauntYou joke]] a lot and [[DeadpanSnarker snark]] constantly with sarcasm being their native tongue, which generally speaking is an act to cover up their fears, emotions as [[BeneaththeMask nobody knows who you really are]] which can easily make them [[BewaretheSillyOnes dangerous when they stop joking around]] or [[BewaretheNiceOnes cut loose]].
14* They tend to be underneath the superhero persona, simply are [[TheEveryman The Everyman]] or [[UnluckyEverydude Unlucky Everydude]] who's regular, relatable life is simply been a mess and even bigger mess because they are now a hero, becoming the ButtMonkey of the story, [[HumansAreMorons absolutely]] [[BornUnlucky nothing]] goes right for them.
15* Some can be [[KidHero Kid Hero]] or [[OrdinaryHighSchoolStudent Ordinary High-School Student]], or college student/young adult or older, depending on the story. Or has been a hero since their youth all the way to adulthood, [[KidHeroAllGrownUp Kid Hero All Grown-Up]] they're generally around between 15-30.
16* They tend to have ComboPlatterPowers; SuperStrength, SuperSpeed, SuperToughness, or if themed after certain animals or bugs [[WallCrawl has the ability to climb on walls and adhere to surfaces]], some can travel around with BuildingSwing or {{Flight}}. They're generally unpredictable or very acrobatic. Some like to snare their enemies in threads.
17* While they are heroic, some have mixed reputation among the public, some are a HeroWithBadPublicity for whatever reasons that might be. Often is controversial for whatever reasons.
18* They tend to have a severe bad case of ChronicHeroSyndrome or SamaritanSyndrome that borders almost if not neurotically to the point of drowning into GuiltComplex or SurvivorsGuilt, shouting "ItsAllMyFault!" Which could exist for whatever personal reasons they decided to be a hero.
19* They wear a costume similar (full-face mask, spandex head-to-toe, has a logo, [[PrimaryColorChampion has primary color]], has a theme).
20* Their origin involves science, scientific accident, genetic mutation, [[GadgeteerGenius inventive story]] or being a regular person thrusted upon a burden of obligation to be a [[TheHero hero]].
21* They have a [[SecretIdentity secret identity]], they usually have one to protect their loved ones from potential threats or anxiety of their loved ones disowning them.
22* Some tend to be gifted in science and technology, tend to be inventive and craft things, or some are just very smart realistically, but generally a geek or a nerd.
23* They are street-level vigilantes and generally caring of the underdogs like the hero, preferring to protect the lower-class neighborhood over global threats unless being called for it.
24* [[BeingGoodSucks Their heroism causes them a lot of grief]] and they will reach an arc where HeroicFatigue sets in and they hang up the costume before [[TenMinuteRetirement their moral imperative pulls them right back]].
25* Their supporting cast includes a psychopathic villain that's their arch-enemy that are usually either a mad bomber or a wealthy industrialist, a beautiful friend that the hero has a crush on but can't confess because of their double life who are either a neighbor or someone from high school, college or work., a wealthy friend or successful one that is often there for them. Parental figures in their lives that often acts as their motivator to be better. Probably has a problematic love triangle that result the hero often to make them upset because they are usually late, worst case scenario? They all will suffer horribly or die because of the hero's rotten luck or based on the story the hero will face to enhance themselves to be better.
26* Their story usually has a bad ending or good one depending on how the story ends.
27
28Compare with the other CaptainErsatz[=/=]{{Expy}} StockParodies including BatmanParody, WolverineWannabe, CaptainPatriotic, WonderWomanWannabe, TheFantasticFaux and SupermanSubstitute. Drop the "man" part and look through ArachnidTropes
29----
30!!Examples:
31
32[[foldercontrol]]
33
34[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
35* ''Literature/AccelWorld'': Haru is [[ClassicalAntiHero a meek, fat nerdy kid who's a magnet for bullies]]... until he gains access to the {{Cyberspace}} world of Brain Burst. There he gains [[LivingADoubleLife a double life]] as [[ChromeChampion Silver]] [[AnimalThemedSuperbeing Crow]], where he experiences [[CallOfTheWildBlueYonder the joy of zooming through the air]] (accompanied in the AnimatedAdaptation by [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1U9Vj6lCRYM soaring orchestral music]]). While his wings are {{unique|ProtagonistAsset}} they're far from a StoryBreakerPower, and his biggest asset in combat is said to be his bottomless reserves of HeroicSpirit lurking [[BewareTheNiceOnes beneath the surface]]. And then he gets infected by a ClingyCostume which slowly grows in influence and threatens to turn him into an insane berserker, [[spoiler:but [[ComicBook/{{Venom}} can be rendered inert temporarily by the sound of bells and permanently by sacred fire]]]].
36* ''Manga/ChainsawMan'': [[Characters/ChainsawManDenji Denji]] is a subtler example than most, but he's still a strongly red-colored teenage hero who [[UnluckyEverydude constantly struggles]] with life, love (he's even enamored with a redhead like Peter is), [[PerpetualPoverty money]], and loss. He lacks the mindset of responsibility, but [[{{Determinator}} continues fighting]] even through [[CrapsackWorld the horrors of his world]] for his simple dreams. He even has several overlapping abilities, such as SuperStrength, {{Building Swing}}ing, and sticking to walls.
37* One of the "Tachikomatic Days" {{Omake}}s featured in ''Anime/GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex'' shows off a new superhero named "Tachiko-Man", a red and blue Tachikoma who swings around while singing a parody of the "Spider-Man" theme song. The Tachikomas are adorable {{Spider Tank}}s who can swing around by using guide wires that shoot out like webfluid. The joke just takes it to its logical conclusion.
38-->''Tachiko-Man, Tachiko-Man, doin' the things a Tachikoma can...''
39* ''Manga/{{Gamma}}'': Hornetman's costume is a clear reference to Spider-Man,[[note]]And possibly to his one-time disguise as "The Hornet", though it's unclear if this was intentional.[[/note]]. He is also known as "The Hero of This Town" (a play on Friendly Neighborhood). WordOfGod his relationship with the speedster Blue Train was written as a {{Homage}} to Peter's friendship with Harry Osborn in ''Film/SpiderMan3''. His actual powers are very different though, consisting of a "Hornet Sting" that lets him punch incredibly hard with his left arm.
40* ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'' naturally has a few influences:
41** Izuku Midoryia aka Deku: Both were scrawny nerds who became {{Action Hero}}es thanks to a [[ItBeganWithATwistOfFate twist of fate]]. They [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatResponsibility feel that it's their responsibility]] to use their powers to save others, [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished even at severe cost to themselves]]. They're also both extremely close to their mother figures and suffer from being BornUnlucky. Creator/KoheiHorikoshi has stated that Spider-Man is his favorite comic book hero and one of his primary inspirations for ''My Hero Academia'' as a whole, particularly Midoriya's philosophy that a hero is someone who saves others and brings them reassurance in times of crisis. [[spoiler:He later gains the ability to fire black tendrils ("Blackwhip") that mimics the black Spider-Suit and ComicBook/{{Venom}}. The fact that the tendrils appear to be created out of dark electricity brings to mind [[Characters/MarvelComicsMilesMorales Miles Morales]]' ability to fire electric "venom". After Deku works on getting the Quirk under control, he can use the tendrils to grab objects and swing around much like the wall-crawler with his webs. Another one of the Quirks absorbed into One For All is "[[SpiderSense Danger Sense]]", which tells him when he or someone around him is in imminent life-threatening danger via a pulsing sensation in his head.]]
42** Tsuyu Asui aka Froppy whose Quirk, allows her to "do whatever a frog can" and indeed she can stick to surfaces and crawl along them like a spider. Then we have Hanta Sero aka Cellophane who uses his tape power to swing around and stick people to things like ol' webhead.
43** In the spin-off, ''Manga/MyHeroAcademiaVigilantes'', the main character, Kouichi Haimawari aka "The Crawler"; his Quirk, Sliding, has him have to go on all fours and slide along the ground like a water bug [[spoiler:and later in the series he finds out he can stick to objects as well]]. What's more, is that he's a college student, lives in a shanty like dwelling where his partners freeload at constantly, and usually is a ButtMonkey as much as Peter is.
44* The villain Kidomaru from ''Anime/{{Naruto}}'' has spider-like abilities which involve shooting and swinging from webs, and his design is similar to the six armed Spider-Man.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Comic Books]]
48* ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' villain Black Spider has a spider theme, similar costume, and was inspired to fight criminals by the death of a loved one. The difference is, Black Spider killed his own father [[AccidentalMurder by accident]], he uses guns, and he kills the criminals he's after.
49* ''ComicBook/Robin1993'': The Redback Spider may be a villain rather than a hero, but her costume is ''very'' similar to that of Spider-Man, though she's traded out the wrist web-shooters for venomous needles.
50* ''ComicBook/RatMan1989'': The main hero met at least 3 different not-Spidey characters: The earlier and more known one is just called "The Man in the Spider Suit", but then there is Wallclimber from the New York arc, and a crossover comic featuring the actual Spider-Man from early on was later [[OrwellianRetcon redone]] to replace him with a CaptainErsatz called Human Spider.
51* In ''ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'' (Pre-[[CosmicRetcon Super Genesis Wave]]), Stealth the Hedgehog from [[AlternateUniverse Mobius-Seventeen]] is a deliberate parody of Spider-Man, wearing a navy-blue full-body suit, the eyes similar to Spider-Man's eye-lenses. He is seen battling Professor Egg (a Green Goblin-esq alternate universe counterpart to Dr. Eggman) briefly in Issue 149 before his zone was destroyed during [[ItMakesSenseInContext Master Mogul's rampage through the Cosmic Interstate, but was eventually restored by Titan Tails]].
52* Believe it or not, ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' began as a Spider-Man {{Expy}} to cash in on the latter's success. Both traveled by swinging around the city, both had father figures that suffered DeathByOriginStory, both had an acrobatic fighting style, and both had some kind of [[SpiderSense enhanced senses that allowed them to spot danger]]. It wasn’t until later that he was taken in his own direction, especially once Creator/FrankMiller took over.
53* ''ComicBook/BlueBeetle'' is a DC equivalent, especially in Ted Kord. Note that Ted Kord & Peter Parker share a creator in Creator/SteveDitko. Jaime Reyes is an AffirmativeActionLegacy version of this trope.
54* In ''ComicBook/KingdomCome'', there's a random superhero that goes by the name "The Whiz" who's the child of now older Freddy and Mary who were originally part of Shazam's family. He gets recruited by Superman and Wonder Woman into their newly formed expansion of the Justice League, dressed in a red-and-yellow suit with a mask that resembles strikingly Spider-Man's mask and wings that resembles that of Steve Ditko's original design. This strengthen the fact that the suit design was designed by Alex Ross and stated that he was originally supposed to be called "The Spider" which was identical to his old drawings when he was seven.
55* In ''ComicBook/AstroCity'' there is the hero Jack-In-The-Box, who, though nonpowered and with a general "prankster/clown" motif borrowed more from ComicBook/TheCreeper or Killjoy, is clearly meant to be Spider-Man at first glance -- street-level hero, acrobatic FragileSpeedster fighting style, unusual means of locomotion (spring-feet), favors string-like weapons to snare criminals, and constant wisecracking. One issue involves his fear of spawning murderous, deathly serious AntiHeroSubstitute successors, a pretty obvious joke on characters like Venom and Kaine. Appropriately enough, his first appearance was a [[DolledUpInstallment reworked pitch]] for a ''Spider-Man'' story that Marvel didn't approve.
56* ''ComicBook/{{Static}}'' is Milestone's take on Spider-Man as an ElectricBlackGuy. One issue openly [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded it]] when it was revealed Static can stick to walls with his power, but dislikes doing so fearing he'd been seen as ripping off [[BaitAndSwitch Dracula]].
57* ''ComicBook/{{Sideways}}'' is DC's latest take on Spider-Man, with ThinkingUpPortals.
58* ''ComicBook/{{Nova}}'' is Spider-Man meets ''ComicBook/GreenLantern''. And from Marvel.
59* Speaking of ''Franchise/GreenLantern'', Kyle Rayner in the 90s was this. He was a young man that was somewhat down on his luck and was thrust into superhero life and had to deal with the complications this brought to his personal life
60* The 2000 AD comic ''ComicBook/TheTenSeconders'', as part of its BewareTheSuperman theme, has DarkerAndEdgier versions of most superheroes, including Superman, Mr. Fantastic, and the Hulk. Its version of Spider-Man, Arachne, is a monstrous [[SpiderPeople Were-Spider]] with a nasty case of [[ImAHumanitarian anthropophagy]].
61* The defictionalized ''[[WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons Radioactive Man]]'' comics has a Spider-Man spoof in Parker Peterman. He satirizes Peter's Ditko-era borderline misanthropy by being a bitter jerkass who snaps at anyone who talks to him, interpreting any gesture as either an insult or condescension, especially at the LovableJock who keeps reaching out to him in spite of it. He even mistreats the relatives that raised him when his parents died. When he's bitten by a spider that's been irradiated by Radioactive Man's "atomoptics", he instead mutates into a giant spider monster driven to attack everyone he thinks mocked him. When he's defeated and turned back to normal, he's shown to have [[NotQuiteBackToNormal ended up with wallcrawling powers]], with dubious prospects of a career as a superhero. He's also a MetaGuy in the same vein as Cubert Farnsworth because he lampshades the impossibility of radiation derived superpowers, especially the fact that Radioactive Man is completely safe to be around.
62* Earth 8, DC's pseudo-Marvel Universe, as seen in ''ComicBook/TheMultiversity'', is home to the Bug, who wears a mask identical to Spidey's but with antennae, and is billed in [[MutuallyFictional the fiction of other universes]] as "The Hero You Hate to Love".
63* Another version of the Bug had previously appeared in ''ComicBook/SupermanBatman'' as a member of the Maximums, a pastiche of ComicBook/TheUltimates. This version had four arms, a mostly red costume with a blue mask, and had a villain named Halloween who was shown throwing his girlfriend Kirsten off the Golden Gate Bridge.
64* ''ComicBook/{{Invincible}}'' tells the story of the son of the earth's [[SupermanSubstitute greatest hero]] becoming a hero as well, with the personality and relationships of Spider-Man. So in short, a mix of the webcrawler and ComicBook/{{Superboy}}.
65* ''ComicBook/PS238'': [[FunPersonified the Flea]] has the bug theme, full-body costume and acrobatic fighting style (including WallCrawl), as well as the sense of humor (though unlike Spider-Man, not just when he's fighting). He's also a PestController, a power which Spider-Man only pretends to have.
66* ''ComicBook/NineteenSixtyThree'' has the Fury who's Spidey mixed with a bit of ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}, being a wisecracking teenaged hero in a red and blue costume.
67* ''ComicBook/{{Darkhawk}}'' is a blend of Spider-Man (Teenager thrust into the world of heroics), Falcon (Fights with wings), and Nova (Alien gifted powers apart of a galactic peacekeeper force).
68* ''ComicBook/TheBoys'' features occasional mentions of a superhero named Webweaver near the end, who is heavily implied to be a Spider-Man stand-in.
69* ''ComicBook/TheLeopardFromLimeStreet'' is basically the UK's version of Spider-Man, except with leopard powers and a still living [[AbusiveParent abusive uncle]].
70* The ''Supergirl: Matrix'' tie-in miniseries to ''ComicBook/{{Convergence}}'' has Ambush Bug talk to a superhero named Louse-Man, who wears a red and blue costume that covers his body completely and mentions that he got his powers from being bitten by radioactive head lice.
71* In Savage Dragon comics, there was a vigilante wearing a blue-and-red outfit bouncing around the city with one-liners called The Star, he usually fought by Dragon's side.
72* ''Araña de rincón'' is a chilean comic whose protagonist is Jose Carrillo, a young man whose life is torn apart by crime and who manages to obtain an exoskeleton shaped similar to that of a spider. His superhero name is the name of the most common Chilean spider in homes and the most poisonous.
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Fan Works]]
76* In ''Fanfic/Earth27'' there is the Spider-Bat, a kid who is a fan of Batman, but is more scared of Spiders, so he combines the two to the Dark Knight's approval, and his arch-nemesis is the Gargoyle.
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
80* The first of various villains the titular heroes in the animated gay porn film ''Stonewall and Riot: The Ultimate Orgasm'' "interrogate" in a montage is a Spider-Man {{Expy}} called the Webmaster. His design is a revealing black suit with wires that he weaves into a web-like form and his villainous work is implied to have something to do with illegal online porn piracy.
81* At the start of the ''WesternAnimation/FairlyOddParents'' movie ''WesternAnimation/AbraCatastrophe'' Timmy uses his wishes to be in various movie parodies including the "Amazingly Unsueable Arachnid Kid".
82[[/folder]]
83
84[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
85* As ''Film/SuperheroMovie'' derives most of its plot from the ''Film/SpiderManTrilogy'', the main character Rick Riker, A.K.A. the Dragonfly, is a deliberate {{Parody}} of Creator/TobeyMaguire's interpretation of Spider-Man. He was raised by his aunt and uncle, gains his powers from a genetically altered bug, he can climb on walls, has enhanced reflexes, super-strength, invulnerability and is picked on by ''everyone'' for no real reason. In a case of HilariousInHindsight, Rick was played by Creator/DrakeBell, who went on to [[WesternAnimation/UltimateSpiderMan2012 actually voice Spider-Man]].
86* In-universe in ''Film/SpiderManFarFromHome''. Peter wears a new costume to preserve his secret identity so people won't notice that Spider-Man is showing up in the same countries Peter's class visits. Ned covers for him by saying the black-suited Spider-Man is a European Spider-Man knock-off called "Night Monkey".
87* ''Film/{{Sky High|2005}}'':
88** One of the kids demonstrating his powers for Coach Boomer can grow two extra pairs of arms at will, presumably as a nod to Spider-Man's ''Six Arms Saga''.
89** Nurse Spex says some kids get superpowers (or die) after being bitten by radioactive insects.
90** One of Will's homework questions asks if Tigerman was bitten by a radioactive tiger or bitten by a regular tiger then exposed to radiation.
91* In the 2001 horror-movie remake of "[[Film/EarthVsTheSpider2001 Earth Vs The Spider]]" a security guard who often dream of being his favorite comic book superhero called The Arachnid Avenger, an obvious parody of Spider-Man which later the security worker self-injected himself with an experimental spider-serum in hopes of becoming his idol, instead. He slowly mutated into a humanoid spider creature that prey on those he deemed guilty.
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Literature]]
95* The protagonist of ''Literature/{{Worm}}'', Taylor Hebert, is an OrdinaryHighSchoolStudent who escapes from bullying in school with her SecretIdentity as the bug-themed super Skitter. She is very clever and capable of figuring out ways to work around seemingly impossible problems, and develops a bad reputation due to joining the villains to spy on them for the heroes and ending up just sticking with being a villain and doing increasingly morally questionable things while justifying it for the greater good, though she also tries to save everyone in her territory of the city she lives in and develops a huge guilt complex and desire to make up for it when her actions inadvertently lead to one person's kidnapping.
96[[/folder]]
97
98[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
99* The Iraqi live action comedy series "Akbar Chathab اكبر جذاب (Biggest Liar)" is about an old man named Hooby who tells his friends a made up story about how when he was young he had an adventure that parodies famous stories, one episode parodies Spider-Man as "Al-Rajul Alsursur الرجل الصرصر (cockroach man)".
100* Film/SpiderPlantMan, a 2005 UsefulNotes/ComicRelief sketch, starred Creator/RowanAtkinson as Peter Piper, who, after being bitten by a genetically engineered spider-plant (the geneticists had given it teeth for some reason), gained the ability to shoot vines from his wrists and cling to walls and became Spider-Plant-Man! He then had to rescue his girlfriend Jane-Mary from a villain who turned out to be Batman, jealous that he wasn't the top movie superhero any more.
101* The second episode of ''Series/{{Smallville}}'', "[[Recap/SmallvilleS01E02Metamorphosis Metamorphosis]]" has Clark fighting Greg Arkin. Arkin was bitten by an insect infected with [[GreenRocks Kryptonite radiation]] and developed the ability to cling to walls and shoot webbing from his mouth among other powers.
102* ''Series/KamenRiderRevice'' gives us Kamen Rider Demons, a devil-powered but spider-themed super-identity that gets passed around to various different people (including one of the villains). The Demons armor has a red, white, and blue color scheme, and can shoot webbing out of the hands to fight. Its debut episode even has its first user use the webbing to hang upside-down.
103* Jeramie Brasieri from ''Series/OhsamaSentaiKingOhger'' is the sixth ranger known as Spider Kumonos. He is a human-Bognaarok hybrid with the same powers as a certain friendly neighborhood hero: ProjectileWebbing, SuperStrength, [[WallCrawl wall-crawling]], and [[InASingleBound super leaping]]. Jeramie is also a [[HybridDiscrimination social outcast due to being a hybrid]], similar to how Spider-Man is often depicted as feared and misunderstood.
104[[/folder]]
105
106[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
107* ''Wrestling/{{WCW}}'' briefly had "Arachnaman" (portrayed by Wrestling/BradArmstrong), a rather blatant rip-off of Spider-Man wearing a purple and yellow version of Spidey's suit who used web shooters that sprayed silly string during his entrance. They quickly retired the character after Marvel threatened to sue.
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:TabletopGames]]
111* Joel Stein/the Splotch in ''TabletopGame/HaltEvilDoer'' is Spidey with CastingAShadow powers. He's a shy nerd as Joel and a wisecracker as Splotch, fights crime due to a tragedy in his past (his brother used the [[RingOfPower Shadow Ring]] as Ink, until he was crippled), is constantly denigrated by the media (in a twist, the J. Jonah Jameson figure is his dad, who runs a TV news station that attacks Splotch, and of course has no idea that this is Joel), and can generate "strands" of shadow to capture villains or swing around the city. His costume looks very much like Symbiote-Spidey, and his enemies include Dr. Necros, a MadScientist with a "hydra suit" of four snapping arms (Dr Octopus); his EvilCounterpart Stain, who has the same abilities but none of the responsibility (Venom); and Bloodstain, who's Stain only AxCrazy (Carnage).
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Video Games]]
115* In ''VideoGame/DCUniverseOnline'', you can make a character with the Acrobatics movement style, which lets them climb walls and ceilings and can be upgraded to allow using a zipline to pull yourself toward and up to the top of walls. Expect to see a lot of people recreating Spider-Man with this and the game's wardrobe system.
116* In the superhero RPG game ''VideoGame/FreedomForce'', there's a prominent team member of the superhero group called The Ant. Who has similarities to Spider-Man such as they're both bullied nerd who transforms into arthropod-themed superheroes who quips, he takes a few elements from Ant-Man but overall has characteristics of Peter Parker.
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Web Animation]]
120* Tarantula-Man in the ''WebAnimation/SocietyOfVirtue'' is a spider-themed superhero who has a history with saving a specific woman (implying that she actively throws herself into danger in order to get his attention). She undoes his mask and finds out that the reason why he wears the mask is because of his ButterFace. She tries to not let her disgust known, but he does not buy it.
121** In a nod to Spider-Man's actions screwing over his loved ones, Tarantula-Man's RoguesGallery are actually the friends, teachers, and even family of his civilian persona, John Johnson. There's even a guy who doesn't bear a grudge, but feels obligated to kill someone who's so horrible a person that he's turned all of his loved ones into Super Villains bent on revenge.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Webcomics]]
125* A grad student at "Ohio Research University" who works under Dr. Lambha, Heather Brown from ''Webcomic/{{Spinnerette}}'' was involved in a scientific accident that infused her with spider DNA. It grants her the proportional strength of a spider, a healing factor, the ability to shoot web from her lower back, and two pairs of extra arms. The Spider-Man influence in self-evident, such as when [[HowDoIShotWeb she tries shooting webs from her wrists with... mixed results]].
126* Ms. Ribbon of ''Setback'' sometimes runs into this. While she's not bug-themed nor can she stick to surfaces, she gains her powers from an electrical accident from her phone, the way she fires ribbons from her costume's sleeves is sometimes compared to Spidey and she has to building swing like him every so often as well, even trying emulate his style when she started off (though unlike him, she hates heights and manages to find a work around by making ribbon wheels under her shoes and speeds along the ground that way.)
127* ''Webcomic/LeagueOfSuperRedundantHeroes'' has Arachnid Dude, who's pretty much a direct Spider-Man {{Expy}}, including the rotten luck in his personal life from what he reports (he's not a main character). The differences are is with his green-themed costume, his six arms and multiple eyes, and the fact the web-fluid doesn't come from his hands but from you'd expect from an arachnid....
128* Spoderman is a very poorly drawn Spidey avatar featured in the meme series Dolan Duck (featuring other crappily drawn avatars of famous cartoon or movie characters, Dolan being an obvious skewing of WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck).
129* ''Webcomic/EnnuiGo'' has Spiral-Man, an ally of resident ComicBook/{{Nightwing}} {{Expy}} Galiath. He's a quippy teenage superhero, his powers involve shooting something out of his hands (spiral-shaped energy rather than webs), his civilian name is Benjy (after Spider-Man's Uncle Ben), and at least one major development in his life mirrors a plot point in ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan2022''.
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Web Video]]
133* In the ''WebVideo/{{Smosh}}'' video "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuA-7qxd2A0 MANSPIDER!]]", Anthony saw a radioactive spider and tried to make it bite him get spider-powers. When it wouldn't bite him, ''he'' bit the spider and became Manspider, an anthropomorphic spider person. While it gave him three extra pairs of arms, they are ineffective and he is about as weak as he was before, making him [[SuperZeroes a massive loser as a superhero]].
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Western Animation]]
137* ''WesternAnimation/MiraculousLadybug'':
138** Ladybug and Chat Noir operate as {{gender|Flip}}-bent versions of Spider-Man and ComicBook/BlackCat, respectively. Ladybug is an arthropod-themed hero with enhanced flexibility, a red costume, transports via BuildingSwing and possesses an enhanced sense of intuition when using the item her [[LethalJokeItem Lucky Charm]] deposits. She struggles to balance her hero work with her personal life, only continuing it out of a sense of moral duty, with a blond crush (Adrien/Gwen), a blonde bully (Chloé/Flash), a high-class villain that is the head of the various villains in the series and a secret identity (Hawk Moth/Green Goblin) and a villain who happens to be the father of someone close to her (Gabriel Agreste, father of Adrien/Norman Osborn, father of Peter's friend Harry). Unlike [[HeroWithBadPublicity the usual examples]], both heroes are beloved by the citizens of UsefulNotes/{{Paris}}.
139** [[Recap/MiraculousLadybugS02E18Anansi Anansi]] is a villain made by Hawk Moth, Alya's older sister [[VillainPossessedBystander Akumatized]] into a spidery AnimalThemedSuperbeing with super-strength and the power to shoot web. Even the fact that she has six arms can be viewed as a reference to Spidey's infamous Six Arms Saga. Her name is even the same as [[Myth/AkanMythology a spider]] from UsefulNotes/{{Africa}}n folklore.
140* The Brown Widow from ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBros'' is a deliberate CaptainErsatz of Spider-Man in his design, abilities and personality, right down to the fact that he gets no respect from ''anybody''. It doesn't help that his name is an unpleasant mashup of two of the most dangerous spiders in North America, the brown recluse and black widow. He has the misfortune of his webbing coming from a large orifice on his lower back, which he has to clean with a Q-tip. He also happens to exist in a world [[ExpyCoexistence where Spider-Man is still a fictional comic book superhero]].
141* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'';
142** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS15E19SimpleSimpson Simple Simpson]]" has Homer become a superhero called Pie Man. Has shades of BatmanParody but a lot of the jokes are nods to the 2002 ''Film/SpiderMan1'' film.
143** The first story from "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS23E3TreehouseOfHorrorXXII Treehouse of Horror XXII]]", in which Homer gets paralyzed by a spider bite and can only communicate by farting, ends with him dressed as Spider-Man and shooting webs from his ass.
144* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/AtomicPuppet'' had Joey become Worm-Boy after being bitten by a silkworm, which gave him a silkworm abdomen he could use to shoot silk from.
145-->'''Joey:''' I'm your kindly community-based silk-slinger!
146* When ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'' debuted, it became apparent [[Characters/DCAUTerryMcGinnis Terry McGinnis]], Bruce Wayne's successor as Batman, was based greatly on Spider-Man. Terry, like Peter, is an unpopular high school student who's turn to heroics was based on losing his father figure, has a high school bully, a LoveTriangle between a devoted girlfriend and a DatingCatwoman girl, enemies that seem like {{Expy}} of Spider-Man's villains, including a best friend that turns evil, a CorruptCorporateExecutive that becomes his {{green|AndMean}}-colored arch-nemesis, and [[spoiler:he beat the Joker by taunting him, leading to a glorious VillainousBreakdown.]] He also has elements of ''ComicBook/SpiderMan2099'' such as being a superhero in a futuristic dystopian setting and being the successor to a previous hero.
147* In ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010'', minor villain Black Spider is a blatant CaptainErsatz of Spider-Man visually, resembling the Marvel hero far more than his DC namesake. He even has the same logo, webshooters, pose, cocky sarcastic demeanor and was voiced by Creator/JoshKeaton (who previously voiced the character in ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'').
148* One of Ben's aliens in ''Franchise/Ben10'' is Spidermonkey, who has a near-identical powerset to Spider-Man, which involves shooting and swinging using web, along with [[WallCrawl clinging to walls]]. Ben also finds himself menaced by a J. Jonah Jameson {{expy}} named Will Harangue, a reporter who constantly tries to shame him and brand him as a criminal. Further reference are seen when one episode has Spidermonkey being chased by Sunder the Retriever, an alien who rides a hang glider much like Green Goblin. In addition, Ultimate Spidermonkey has four spider-legs in place of extra arms, that functions very similarly to Doctor Octopus' tentacles.
149* ''WesternAnimation/StretchArmstrongAndTheFlexFighters'' follows a ''Trio'' of these. They follow the formula of WakeUpGoToSchoolSaveTheWorld, and deal with a EvilCounterpart [[spoiler:that is a CorruptCorporateExecutive mixed with VillainWithGoodPublicity.]]
150* ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' is best described as "Peter Parker if he was a half-ghost". Like Peter, Danny has to deal with teen hormones and bullies, and also ends up as a HeroWithBadPublicity. In addition, his archenemy, Vlad Plasmius, is a straight-up {{Expy}} of Norman Osborn, as both of them are [[VillainWithGoodPublicity well-respected millionaires]] who lead a villainous double life and both [[WhyAreYouNotMySon desire the hero to be their son]].
151* ''WesternAnimation/TheMask'' has [[ShowWithinAShow comic book character]] Insector the Bug-Man. His origin story is a reversal of Spider-Man's--he became radioactive and then got bitten by a bug. A pair of TooDumbToLive dweebs tried to replicate this but ''forgot the bug,'' instead becoming Putty-Thing and Fish-Guy.
152* ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken'' has a parody character called Kid Venison, Perry gets bit by a radioactive white-tailed deer, who grants him the powers of a deer such as superhuman leaping and growing antlers out of his forehead, donning a mask that resembles Spider-Man and becomes Kid Venison, only to get driven over by an incoming truck.
153* ''WesternAnimation/RandyCunninghamNinthGradeNinja'': The titular protagonist shares a lot of the baseline traits associated with Spider-Man, being a teenage superhero attending high school who struggles with responsibility. His costume includes a full face mask, a scarf he can use to swing around, and can stick to walls on occasion. He loves to crack jokes and engage in witty banter during fights, has a fighting style that involves a lot of CombatParkour, and tends to be the ButtMonkey in a lot of situations. His supporting cast includes a best friend in the vein of [[Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse Ned Leeds]], a JerkJock (whose name is Bash Johnson as a ShoutOut to Flash Thompson), and a NiceGirl he has feelings for. He also has a green ArchEnemy whom he struggles against for the entire series, with various other villains being similar to famous Spider-Man foes, like Hannibal [=McFist=] (a CorruptCorporateExecutive like Norman Osborn), Viceroy (who can be considered an amalgam of Tinkerer and Spencer Smythe), and Catfish Booray (a RaginCajun Kraven the Hunter). To contrast with Spider-Man, Randy's Ninja persona is adored by Norrisville High, thanks to their history of protecting the school from the Sorcerer.
154* When Mark Grayson goes into a portal to another universe opened by Angstrom Levy in the Season 2 finale of ''WesternAnimation/{{Invincible|2021}}'', he meets a superhero named Agent Spider who faces off against his enemy "Prof Ock" who has mechanical arms and is a clear expy to [[Characters/MarvelComicsOttoOctavius Doctor Octopus]]. This is an obvious reference to the comic book where Invincible and the actual Spider-Man teamed up, but due to copyright issues with Disney (considering the comic was made 20 years ago which could have changed the Spider-Man rights by then) Creator/RobertKirkman resorted to creating a legally distinct character to fill in that cameo including Creator/JoshKeaton who's famous for his role as Spidey in ''WesternAnimation/TheSpectacularSpiderMan'' voicing Agent Spider and quoting being familiar with multiverse adventures (in reference to ''ComicBook/SpiderVerse'') having been on some himself.
155[[/folder]]

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