The Multiverse is filled with many different versions of Spider-Man and Spider-related heroes and villains, but none are weirder or creepier than the Spider-Man of Earth-11580. In that universe, thousands of spiders have come together to create a body they believe to be Peter Parker. Yes, Spiders-Man is a hilariously real hero who is far too silly to ever appear in live-action in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Peter Parker learned there are many variants of Spider-Man and other web-slinging heroes across the Multiverse during the events of Spider-Verse by Dan Slott, Olivier Coipel, Christos Gage, and several other creators. The event saw the introduction of a handful of new characters, including Spider-Gwen and Lady Spider, while bringing back several who made previous appearances in the pages of Marvel Comics, including Spider-Man Noir, Spider-Ham, Spider-Girl, and the Mangaverse Spider-Man. However, in the Spider-Verse sequel series Spider-Geddon, Spiders-Man was revealed, a hero who was literally made up of thousands of spiders. The silliest version of Spider-Man has one of the creepiest origins in comics.

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In Spider-Geddon #3 by Gage, Slott, Carlo Barberi, Jose Marzan Jr., David Curiel, and VC's Travis Lanham, Spiders-Man makes his first appearances, as the Earth-11580 hero is described as "thousands of spiders that believe they are Peter Parker."

Spiders-Man Marvel Comics Image

In the Spider-Geddon tie-in, The Vault of Spiders #2, the story "Spiders-Man" by Cullen Bunn, Mark Bagley, Andrew Hennessy, Chris Sotomayor, and Lanham, features Spiders-Man's twisted origin. During a tour of Horizon Labs, Peter Parker and Gwen Stacy learn about a new genetic experiment, as thousands of spiders are being injected with radioactive particles. However, after falling into the pit of spiders and beating eaten alive, Peter's consciousness was somehow absorbed by the collection of arachnids. So, while Peter Parker has a hilarious entrance in Spider-Geddon, his origin turns out to be much more tragic than initially believed. Ultimately, despite Gwen's hope that he could be changed back into his human form, Spiders-Man only sees himself as a monster and leaves her as she begs to let her help him.

Spiders-Man

Spiders-Man has since appeared in more Spider-Verse-related crossovers, as the character's twisted existence makes him worth keeping around. However, it seems like the creepy version of Spider-Man and Peter Parker is too much of a strange character to ever leap to live-action in the MCU. Although, considering how weird the Spider-Verse animated films can get (in a good way), it would be silly to count out a Spiders-Man appearance in those films. We'd love to see the hero on the big screen.

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