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As the new Spider-Girl, she starred in a monthly Spider-Girl comic that debuted on November 17, 2010 [3] as a tie-in to the "Big Time" storyline in The Amazing Spider-Man. [4] With the change of moniker to Spider-Girl, she's the second published character to adopt the "Spider-Girl" alter-ego, but she actually comes prior to the first character ...
Spider-Girl is the code name of several fictional characters in comic books published by Marvel Comics.The most prominent version and first to receive an ongoing series is Mayday Parker from the MC2 universe, the second version is Anya Corazon, and the third version is Gwen Warren, the latter two from the Earth-616 universe.
Insomniac Spider-Man [h] Yuri Lowenthal C: Peter Parker Spectacular Spider-Man [i] Josh Keaton C: Ben Parker [b] Cliff Robertson A: Peter Parker Spider-Man [c] Andrew Garfield A: Peter Parker Spider-Man [b] Tobey Maguire A: Peter Parker Spider-Man (Earth-67) [g] Jorma Taccone U C: Jorma Taccone C: George Stacy [c] Denis Leary A: Mary Jane ...
An older, more cynical incarnation of Mayday Parker / Spider-Girl appears in the Spider-Man / X-Men crossover novel Time's Arrow 3: The Future by Tom DeFalco and Rosemary Edghill. This version wears a costume based on that of Jessica Drew's, modified to resemble Spider-Man's, and has the ability to fire venom blasts like Miles Morales.
Cloak (Tyrone "Ty" Johnson) and Dagger (Tandy Bowen) are a superhero duo appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.Created by writer Bill Mantlo and artist Ed Hannigan, the characters first appeared in Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man #64 (March 1982).
Despite accepting Spider-Man's assistance, Shang-Chi does not tell him about the Society, much to Sister Dagger's frustration. Spider-Man is severely injured by the actions of the drug ring's leader, a former Society member named King Wild Man and after Sister Dagger accuses him of being ashamed of her, Shang-Chi reluctantly tells Spider-Man ...
The Spectacular Spider-Man #236 (July 1996) Charlotte Witter: The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 2, #5 (May 1999) Veranke: New Avengers #1 (January 2005) Ultimate Spider-Woman: Ultimate Spider-Man #98 (October 2006) Ashley Barton: Wolverine Vol. 3 #67 (September 2008) Gwen Stacy: Edge of Spider-Verse #2 (September 2014) Erin Hasko: Web Warriors #10 ...
[68] Chris Sims from ComicsAlliance ranked her as the second-best alternate take on Spider-Man. [69] Mark Ginocchio, writing for ComicBook.com, said the character's debut was the fourth-best alternate Spider-Man story, and that, even though Gwen Stacy was a new character, she was on her way to establishing herself as one of the most popular ...