Anonymous
9/12/2025, 10:06:10 AM
No.150342280
[Report]
>>150342349
>>150342640
>>150343421
>>150343451
>>150343468
>>150344400
Spider-Man's (Peter Parker) greatest villain is going to be Miles Morales. Nothing has really stuck for Miles (he certainly isn't and will never be Spider-Man).
Already Miles is a great villain role in the narrative and in a meta-sense. Miles subverts Peter Parker's origin and character by taking all the familiar aspects and rendering them utterly mundane and uninteresting.
But Peter himself, due to his modern cuckish nature, won't and can't confront Miles about this, because to do so would mean confronting himself about his 'nice guy' persona. This is not to say Peter Parker is always a pushover cuck, he's just been that way for a while.
Miles is a symptom of status quo creep (outside of the political nature of why the character was written) -- Peter has to break out of his usual status quo in order to find a way to either fully reject or incorporate Miles into the meta-canon narrative.
Miles turning into a villain (essentially what's been doing in Spider-Verse) is the way to go. Miles doesn't have any other function to serve other than to be a villain. Miles is always the put-upon victim, mr bland, the token replacement.
For Miles to one day have the chance to become a genuine (non-Spider-Man-named) hero, he first needs to become an outright villain.
Until then, hsi comics and games and movies will continue to not sell even half of what the real Spider-Man makes.
Already Miles is a great villain role in the narrative and in a meta-sense. Miles subverts Peter Parker's origin and character by taking all the familiar aspects and rendering them utterly mundane and uninteresting.
But Peter himself, due to his modern cuckish nature, won't and can't confront Miles about this, because to do so would mean confronting himself about his 'nice guy' persona. This is not to say Peter Parker is always a pushover cuck, he's just been that way for a while.
Miles is a symptom of status quo creep (outside of the political nature of why the character was written) -- Peter has to break out of his usual status quo in order to find a way to either fully reject or incorporate Miles into the meta-canon narrative.
Miles turning into a villain (essentially what's been doing in Spider-Verse) is the way to go. Miles doesn't have any other function to serve other than to be a villain. Miles is always the put-upon victim, mr bland, the token replacement.
For Miles to one day have the chance to become a genuine (non-Spider-Man-named) hero, he first needs to become an outright villain.
Until then, hsi comics and games and movies will continue to not sell even half of what the real Spider-Man makes.