The pair finally fought in AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #526 with the villain never quite on the ropes. Morlun even plucked Peter's eye out and ate it before beating Spidey nearly to death.
Here, Morlun would deliver a brutal beating to Web-head before eerily pulling out and eating one of Parker's eyes. All of this was more than enough for Peter to have a stint at the hospital, but the beaten and broken Wall-crawler had a bizarre rejuvenation when Morlun turned up to finish off the job.
After an exhausting array of punches and kicks, Spider-Man starts to think that he has the victory after a titanic and epic duel that raged across the city. However, an unscathed Morlun tears Spider-Man's left eye out and devours it before savagely pummeling Spider-Man, and leaves him beaten and unconscious.
Sepulveda, based on the Ancients, an earlier version of Morlun's family introduced in the 2006 novel Spider-Man: The Darkest Hours, written by Jim Butcher. "Spider-Geddon" again depicts the Inheritors; Gage said, "They're terrific villains – they literally eat spider-people!
In 2022, Screen Rant ranked Ezekiel Sims 8th in their "10 Most Powerful Silk Villains In Marvel Comics" list.
Following the death of Peter Parker at the hands of Morlun, Ezekiel Sims carried on in his name as the new Spider-Man. He was one of the numerous spider-people from across the Multiverse recruited by Spider-UK to oppose Morlun and his family, the Inheritors.
Ezekiel apparently underwent some form of ritual which granted him the powers of a Spider-Totem. Upon being granted these powers, similar to Spider-Man's powers, he set about amassing a fortune. He soon learnt that, being totemic in nature, he would be beset by those of orders higher up the totemic hierarchy.
Her father Captain George Stacy, after initially wanting to capture Spider-Woman, eventually sides with his daughter upon discovering her identity. She also has close relationships with bandmates the Mary Janes, Peter Parker, and Harry Osborn.
The Sinister Six appear in Spider-Man: Return of the Sinister Six, consisting of Doctor Octopus, Electro, Sandman, Mysterio, the Vulture, and the Hobgoblin.
Eric Needham. The original Black Spider first appeared in Detective Comics #463 (September 1976) and was created by Gerry Conway. Eric Needham is a small-time crook who is addicted to heroin. Eric was first sentenced to prison after mugging and nearly killing an elderly woman but, as a minor, he was out in three years.
He is covered in mortal flesh that can bruise and bleed. He doesn't possess any kind of invulnerability, like some of his superhero buddies. He relies on his speed and agility to stay out of the way of lethal hits.
We see in the climactic battle scene (scene 43 on the DVD), that Spiderman can survive a fall of 80 stories without a single broken bone, concussion, or presumably any internal bleeding.
In the movies, Thor loses his eye in Thor: Ragnarok while battling his half-sister, Hela. She slices him across the face with her sword, ruining his left eye in the process.
Green Goblin
Though his appearance and powers aren't much to inspire fear in the heart of superheroes, Norman Osborne is unquestionably one of the scariest villains from the Spider-Man universe.
The reason Carnage ranks as the number one Spider-Man villain isn't just because of his power or his design. It's because of his sole motivation: destruction of anything and anyone.
Patton Parnell is undoubtedly the evilest and most disturbing version of Peter Parker. He stayed with his uncle, who physically abused him. Patton used to spy on his neighbor Sarah Jane. After a radioactive spider bit him, he could not satiate his unquenchable hunger, eating mice, cats, dogs, and even humans.
Anansi (/əˈnɑːnsi/ ə-NAHN-see; literally translates to spider) is an Akan folktale character and the god of stories, wisdom, knowledge, and trickery, most commonly depicted as a spider, in Akan religion.
The Spider Society and numerous cultures of Earth-616 worship the Spider-Totems as gods. According to Ezekiel Sims and the Ashanti tribe in Ghana, the Great Weaver is Kwaku Anansi, who was the first Spider-Man.
Escaping prison and craving revenge against Spider-Man, Doc Ock contacted Maxwell Dillon, AKA Electro, Sergei Kravinoff, AKA Kraven the Hunter, Quentin Beck, AKA Mysterio, William Baker or Flint Marko, AKA Sandman, and Adrian Toomes, AKA the Vulture, and recruited them into his Sinister Six.
Since this universe already has a Spider-Woman, Gwen decides she needs a new name. Considering how so many of her multiverse counterparts are dead, as if "Death loves Gwen Stacy," she decides to adopt her "Ghost-Spider" nickname as a new official alias.
With Spider-Woman and Silk outclassed by her stolen tech, Cindy-65 revealed that she had created the spider that gave Gwen her powers, derived from the genetic material of an extraterrestrial arachnid. Incapacitating Gwen, Cindy-65 injects her with a formula that removes her spider-powers.
The faith of Ezekiel in the ultimate establishment of a new covenant between God and the people of Israel has had profound influence on the postexilic reconstruction and reorganization of Judaism. Ezekiel's ministry was conducted in Jerusalem and Babylon in the first three decades of the 6th century bc.
Prior to the outbreak, Ezekiel was a zookeeper in D.C. as well as a stage actor. As a child, Ezekiel witnessed his father and grandmother suffer from and ultimately beat thyroid cancer. At some point he met Shiva, a tiger cub who was injured in her exhibit.
The Vision of the Throne-Chariot (1:4-28) Ezekiel's first vision comes when a stormy wind blew in from the north, bringing with it a shiny cloud that contains 'Yahweh's chariot borne by supernatural creatures'. These "four living creatures" are identified in Ezekiel 10:20 as cherubim.