

Takuya Yamashiro Supaidāman (Earth 51778)Īppears in: Spider-Man (1978–79) To see this content please enable targeting cookies. This series is unavailable for official purchase or viewing. The low budget and lack of special effects meant that it was far more grounded that its comic book inspiration, while also featuring a Spider-Man whose costume had visible web-spinners and a belt. This reality’s Peter Parker came from the short-lived CBS TV series of the late 1970s, which nonetheless was popular enough to be spliced into theatrical releases internationally.

Comics-accurate in terms of visuals, look for a skinny, silent Spidey in the background of the Spider-Society it’s probably him.īuy The Electric Company on Amazon Peter Parker Spider-Man (Earth 730911)Īppears in: The Amazing Spider-Man (1977–79) The first live-action Spider-Man was this entirely silent version who appeared in stories narrated by others (including a young Morgan Freeman!) during the Spidey Super Stories segment of iconic kids show The Electric Company in the 1970s. He can be recognized by the lack of consistent webbing across his costume.īuy Spider-Man (1967–70) on Amazon Peter Parker Spidey (Earth 57780)Īppears in: Spidey Super Stories (1974–77) To see this content please enable targeting cookies. The first animated Spider-Man in the real world also holds a special place in Spider-Verse canon: he’s the Spider that gets very aggressive about being pointed at in the end-credit sequence from 2018’s Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Note: This is only a guide to the multiversal Spider-Folk in TV and movies there is a wider Spider-Verse out there that also includes comic book characters (a lot of ‘em!), video game characters, and more…!Īppears in: Spider-Man (1967–70) To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Wanting to find one particular Spider? Chances are, they’re in the list below. Below, find a guide to the on-screen adventures of Marvel’s multiverses wall-crawler, in all of his many forms, to help you build out your own personal Spider-Verse. How can you keep track of… well, everything? Or Spider-Animals, because they may not be pets, per se.) With a myriad of realities out there, it seems as if every single Spider-Man that’s ever appeared is part of the larger web of Spider-Canon… which makes the prospect of trying to be a Spider-Completist especially difficult, these days. If there’s one thing that Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse makes clear, it’s that the multiverse is very, very full of Spider-People.
