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Spider-Man 2099 is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.The character was created by Peter David and Rick Leonardi in 1992 for the Marvel 2099 comic book line, and he is a futuristic re-imagining of the original Spider-Man created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko.
Six-Arm Spider-Man, Spider-Man 2099, and Lady Spider of Earth-803 travel to 2099 to dissect the clone body of Daemos for clues about how to defeat his brethren. Followed to the future by a new Daemos, Six Arm Spider-Man creates a distraction, but is killed before Miguel traps Daemos. Daemos kills himself so another clone can be activated.
Spider-Man 2099 joined the Exiles and left with them. In 2009 Marvel published miniseries "Timestorm 2009–2099", crossing the current Marvel Universe with yet another alternate version of 2099. The Spider-Man 2099 of this reality is a teenager. In 2013, Spider-Man 2099 became trapped in the mainstream Marvel Universe in The Superior Spider-Man.
He was apparently killed when undersea invaders melted the polar ice caps. He later turned up alive and began to assist Spider-Man 2099 by sending him to 2013-2015 to watch over Alchemax. Then he also assisted Spider-Man 2099 and the other multiversal Spider-Men to find a weakness on the Inheritors.
Instead of becoming a company-owned version of Spider-Man he became the opposite, a Spider-Man to fight Alchemax and the other large corporations ruling the world in 2099. He now fights crime as the Spider-Man of 2099. As a spider does, Miguel has fangs which give him the ability to inject poison through his enemies, paralyzing them. [38]
As the teaser trailer confirmed, Oscar Isaac will be back as Miguel O'Hara, aka Spider-Man 2099, following his appearance in the first movie's post-credits scene.
Spider-Man (Miles Gonzalo Morales [1] / m ə ˈ r æ l ɛ s /) is a superhero and the third predominant Spider-Man to appear in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, created in 2011 by writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Sara Pichelli, along with input by Marvel's then-editor-in-chief Axel Alonso.
In issue #97 (Nov. 1998) of the second series titled Peter Parker: Spider-Man, [79] Parker learns his Norman Osborn kidnapped Aunt May and her apparent death in The Amazing Spider-Man #400 (April 1995) had been a hoax. [80] [81] Shortly afterward, in The Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 2) #13 (#454, Jan. 2000), Mary Jane is killed in an airplane ...