Though Venom at first enjoyed his newfound immunities, he left after being abandoned during a dangerous mission. After receiving a head wound, Eddie suffers amnesia. He is later separated from the symbiote, which is presumed killed by the government Overreach Committee.
It's a result of the spell Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) casts at the end of No Way Home, but a spot of Venom's symbiote is left behind on the bar after Eddie has left.
Realizing it's time to let him go, Venom withdraws itself from Eddie's body, which crumbles to dust in Venom's arms.
Venom sacrificed himself to protect his human host from Drake's exploding rocket ship, sending Eddie safely into the San Francisco Bay. The closing moments reveal that Venom survived the blast and is once again bonded with Eddie.
In 1994's SPIDER-MAN #53, the Scarlet Spider (A.K.A. Ben Reilly) succeeded in subduing Venom by separating the symbiote from Eddie Brock. The hero achieved this by shooting some Impact Webbing straight into Venom's mouth. Once they exploded within, they expanded and pushed the cosmic costume away from Brock's body.
This rather alarming news is swept under the rug during the finale and by the end of the movie, Venom and Eddie are back together in human-Symbiote bliss, with everyone rather conveniently forgetting that hosting Venom is slowly killing Eddie.
In Venom: The End, readers learn that the Venom symbiote does everything it can to prolong Eddie Brock's life and keep their bond alive. Through Venom, Eddie lives well past old age.
While Eddie Brock's Venom may not be the strongest here, he is recognizable and the most resilient Symbiote compared to many others. Even though he started out as a pure villain, Brock's Venom showed many heroic traits.
Venom is transported into the MCU, along with a host of other familiar faces, because of a Doctor Strange incantation gone horribly wrong. Think about that spell for a minute, and how it worked. The idea was to make everyone forget Peter Parker's connection to Spider-Man.
But why does Venom lick the TV with Peter's face on it? Besides communicating the apparent fact that Venom wants to eat brains — and Peter's looks tasty to Venom — Venom's hunger appears to be proof of an intrinsic attraction to Peter Parker.
No Way Home Proves Tom Hardy's Venom Is From Andrew Garfield's Spider-Man Universe. Based on how the Sinister Six appeared in Spider-Man: No Way Home, Tom Hardy's Venom could hail from the same reality as Andrew Garfield's Spider-Man.
The bond between the Carnage symbiote and Kasady was stronger than the bond between Brock and the Venom symbiote. Cletus Kasady was also a serial killer and thought of as insane. As a result, Carnage is far more violent, powerful, and deadly than Venom.
Originating as an offspring of Venom, Carnage is much more powerful than its parent symbiote because of the symbiotes' biology, and is in many ways a darker version of him.
The son of Carnage, Toxin, was believed to be the most powerful symbiote ever created. The raw power of Toxin was so great that he was feared even by the King in Black, Knull, creator and leader of the symbiotes.
While captive, the Venom symbiote was forced to give birth to five offspring - Riot, Lasher, Phage, Agony, and Scream - who were bonded to PMCs hired by the Life Foundation. When corrupt corporation Scarmore Inc.
Venom then sacrifices himself in the explosion to keep Eddie safe... or so it seems. The movie ends with Eddie rekindling the flame with Anne Weying (Michelle Williams), their symbiote-aided kiss leaving the door open for their relationship.
The movie doesn't clearly state why, but Venom is probably afraid of Carnage because Carnage doesn't have the moral restrictions that Venom does. They are alien symbiotes. This means they need another living host to bond with if they're going to survive long-term.
Without a doubt, Mike Costa and Mark Bagley's "The Nativity" arc is one of Venom's most unusual stories. The story features the alien symbiote becoming "pregnant" while Eddie Brock was his host, giving birth to the Sleeper symbiote. As detailed in Venom #164, Eddie had a nightmare about the alien's symbiote children.
Unlike the overwhelming majority of its kind, the Venom symbiote developed an attachment to organic life beyond using them as chattel -- with its favorite host having been Eddie Brock, who it kept alive for five-hundred years.
Shortly after, the Gargan version of Venom stumbled across Eddie and the symbiote attempted to bond with Brock again. The leftover symbiote inside Eddie rejected Venom and transformed him to become a stronger force for good.
The symbiote loves Eddie. The symbiote has outright stated it's love for Eddie in the curren Venom run, but Eddie doesn't seem to reciprocat the symbiote's feelings to the same extent. Eddie cares for it, but also doesn't completely trust it.
In the comics Venom describes their bond as being like marriage, he tells Eddie he loves him and Eddie calls him “darling” and “my love”. Plus they literally have a child together. Yes.
Eddie and his fiancée Anne Weying moved to San Francisco after Eddie was fired from the Daily Globe due to an incident that happened in his job, resulting into moving in Anne's home.
The spawn of the Venom symbiote then attached itself to Kasady through his bloodstream. Carnage achieves this by entering Kasady's body through a cut on his hand. This is the reason why Carnage appears as the colour red, as he entered through the bloodstream, which is of course red.