Spider-Bitch (Ashley Barton)

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Spider-Bitch
The Spider-Bitch.jpg
Ashley Barton as Spider-Bitch. Art by Steve McNiven, Dexter Vines, and Morry Hollowell.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearance
  • Cameo appearance; as Ashley: Wolverine Vol. 3 #67 (Sept. 2008)
  • Full appearance; as Spider-Bitch, the Kingpin: Wolverine Vol. 3 #68 (Oct. 2008)
  • As Ashley Barton: Edge of Spider-Verse #1 (Sept. 2014)
Created by
  • Mark Millar
  • Steve McNiven
In-story information
Alter egoAshley "Ash" Parker 8 Barton
SpeciesHuman Mutate
Place of originThe Wastelands, Earth-807128/21923
Team affiliationsSpider-Army/Amazing Arachnids/Spider-Force
Partnerships
  • Clint Barton / Hawkeye (father)
  • Tonya Parker (mother)
  • Ultron-8 (Eight) (stepfather)
  • Otto Octavius / Superior Spider-Man (boss)
Notable aliasesSpider-Bitch, Spider-Woman, Spider-Girl, Kingpin of the Wastelands, Kingpin of Crime, Spider-Lady, Lady Barton, Ash Barton-Morse, King Zemo
Abilities
  • Superhuman strength, speed, and agility
  • Ability to cling to most surfaces
  • Use of interdimensional travel

Spider-Bitch (Ashley Barton; colloquial: "Spider-Woman" or "Spider-Girl") is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven, she is the estranged daughter of Peter Parker / Spider-Man's youngest daughter Tonya and Clint Barton / Hawkeye, and the stepdaughter of Tonya's husband Ultron-8, from the alternate-future of Earth-807128, in which the supervillains overthrew the superheroes three decades earlier. After being saved from execution by her estranged father and Old Man Logan, Spider-Bitch kills the current Kingpin of Crime, succeeding him as the Kingpin of the Wastelands, before unsuccessfully attempting to kill her father and Logan.

While usually portrayed as a supervillain, Spider-Bitch has also been occasionally depicted as a conflicted antihero. In the 2014–15 "Spider-Verse" storyline, Spider-Bitch is subsequently among the first recruited to a resistance movement against the Inheritors' consumption of Spider-People across the Spider-Verse by the Superior Spider-Man, Otto Octavius, in order to devise a plan to kill them all; in the aftermath of the conflict, Spider-Bitch continues to explore the multiverse, assisting various teams of Spider-People while funnelling resources back to her home dimension until the 2018 Spider-Geddon storyline, following which she returns to her reality, seven years having passed, and reclaims her throne from Taskmaster.

Due to the child-oriented storylines of the character's initial appearances post-Old Man Logan, she is alternately referred to as "Spider-Woman" or "Spider-Girl" due to censorship in text box descriptions, referring to herself as "the Spider-B****" in dialogue. Despite her get-up, Spider-Bitch did not inherit her grandfather's powers or abilities, only acquiring a cold and calculating personality and corrupted moral code from being raised in the Wastelands, aiding her rise to power, which is mellowed out in the company of other Spider-People, and a peak human strength from training.

Spider-Bitch was met with positive reviews from critics, with them lauding her name, design, and character, compared to Boba Fett—and a feminist perspective. For promotion, several other versions of the character were developed, accompanied by merchandise. She was also featured in the radio drama podcast series Marvel's Wastelanders as Ash Morse / King Zemo, voiced by Sasha Lane, and in multiple video games as a playable character.

Publication history[]

Created by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven, Spider-Bitch first appeared in Wolverine Vol. 3 #67 (Sept. 2008) before making full appearances the following two issues in October and November.[1] She is a supporting character in the event series Spider-Verse (Nov. 2014–Feb. 2015), Spider-Geddon (Oct.–Dec. 2018), and Old Man Quill (Feb.–Dec. 2019), and a minor character in Old Man Hawkeye (Feb.–Dec. 2018).[2] In December 2021, after learning of the existence of the character, former Marvel Comics writer Sina Grace announced on Twitter that he planned to pitch a Spider-Bitch solo series to Marvel,[3] tentatively entitled Web of Spider-Bitch.[4] The same month, IGN expressed in the character being included in the upcoming films Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (Part One) and (Part Two).[5]

Fictional character biography[]

Old Man Logan[]

Wolverine Vol. 3 #67 (September 2008), depicting Spider-Bitch's first appearance. Art by Steve McNiven.

In the future of Old Man Logan, thirty years after the supervillains overthrew the superheroes, the title character and the now-blind Clint Barton / Hawkeye are passing through Hammer Falls, Nevada after Clint hired Logan as protection while delivering a shipment cross-country, when the pair are greeted by Ultron Eight, the current husband of Clint's third ex-wife Tonya (the youngest daughter of Peter Parker / Spider-Man) and stepfather to their 22-year-old daughter Ashley, both of whom Clint had left when she was three months old with limited contact since. Assuming Clint is there because of a letter Tonya had sent him, Ultron is surprised to learn that he hasn't received it and directs him to Tonya, who informs Clint that Ashley and her friends, apparently inspired by stories of Clint and her grandfather, had formed a super-team and gone north to Salt Lake City, Utah to take down the current Kingpin of Crime (the Michael Clarke Duncan incarnation from Daredevil), before being captured and set to be publicly executed the following morning; Ashley is shown to be in a prison cell to be dressed in a costume similar to that of the deceased Spider-Women and her aunt Mayday Parker / Spider-Girl.[6] Surprised, having "never really had Ashley pegged as the superhero type", telling Tonya that he had gotten the impression that she was an "evil badass type [who] never really seemed especially altruistic" from the few encounters he had had with her, Clint nonetheless agrees to rescue her and doubles Logan's salary to convince him to help him rescue her. While en route, passing through Cedar City, Clint tells Logan that while surprised, he is "so friggin' proud" of his daughter; meanwhile, in the Rice–Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City (now Fisk Lake City), the Kingpin feeds the other members of Ashley's team, successors to Daredevil and the Punisher, to utahraptors while bragging over having killed Magneto during his rise to power, as the pair beg to know what they had done to Ashley. Elsewhere, in her cell inside a customized Walmart-turned-prison, Ashley, known as "Spider-Bitch", sits silently as some of her guards mock the concept of superheroes, before Clint and Logan crash their Spider-Mobile through the wall of the prison. Stating "That'll be Dad." upon hearing the crash, Ashley watches as her father massacre the guards before telling him precisely where on the wall the control panel for her cell is so he can open it, shooting it with an arrow. As the Kingpin enters the room to see what the commotion is, the newly freed Ashley immediately decapitates him by swinging the end of a shotgun into his neck, before knocking a surprised Clint to the ground: Ashley explains that she came to the area not as a superhero, but a supervillain, intending to seize control of the Kingpin's Quarter (formerly Las Vegas) by killing him, the same way him himself had taken over by killing Magneto. As she prepares to beat her father to death,[7] Ashley tells him that she's "doing it because I want to", before Logan, having witnessed Ashley's actions, crashes through the skylight in the Spider-Mobile and rescues Clint. Overlooking the escaping duo, Ashley orders a segment of her new army to go after them, taking her rightful place as Spider-Bitch, the Kingpin of the Wastelands.[8] While drinking at a bar with the following day, Clint regrets not being involved in his daughter's life, recalling the day she was born and how she was the first thing she ever saw;[9] these events are also witnessed by a time-displaced Eva Bell.[10]

Edge of Spider-Verse and Spider-Verse[]

The newly dubbed Ashley Barton as Spider-Bitch, as she appears in The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #10. Art by Justin Ponsor.

Alternately referred to as both "Spider-Woman" and "Spider-Girl" due to censorship in text box descriptions (although referring to herself as "the Spider-B****" in dialogue),[11] and indicated to now be going by her father's surname as Ashley Barton, Spider-Bitch returns in Spider-Verse as one of the first recruited to the Spider-Army of Otto Octavius, the Superior Spider-Man, after he saves her from being consumed by Karn,[12] joining him in recruiting other Spider-People from across the multiverse to their cause, meeting various variants of her grandfather and his family, amongst others.[13][14] After subduing and capturing Karn, Spider-Bitch is among those who push to immediately kill him, only for him to reveal he is but one of a family of Inheritors driven to consume Spider-Totums and escapes his bonds, preparing to consume two of their number before two of his siblings turn up to do so instead; the trio ultimately begin fighting one another, allowing the Spider-Army to escape to their based in 2099. After sending the rest of the Spider-Army to research Karn and his siblings, Otto takes Spider-Bitch and Black-Ops Spider-Man aside to discuss their shared perspective as "killers" who have seen "Brutality. Devastation. Darkness." and whether they are willing to "the face of true evil" and potentially commit genocide against the Inheritors. After a pause, the trio agree, with Spider-Bitch, acknowledging Otto as "boss", stating that "If we're going to survive this, we'll do whatever we have to. Whether the others like it or not."[15] Over the next few months, after fending off several more Inheritor attacks, killing several of them,[16] and learning Karn can be turned to their cause, being an unwilling Inheritor who took no joy in his overpowering biological urges to consume Spider-Totems, banished from returning home for eons, Spider-Bitch agrees with a segment of the Spider-Army to lend Karn some off their life-force before successfully recruiting him to fight and imprison his family.[17][18]

Deadpool: Too Soon?[]

In the Infinite Comic Deadpool: Too Soon?, while investigating an assassin who has been killing several "silly" superheroes across the multiverse, Deadpool seeks to protect Spider-Ham, tracking him down to Central Park, where he interrupts an ongoing baseball game between the Amazing Arachnids (a team of Spider-People from across the Spider-Verse) and the Seething Snikters (a team of variants of Wolverine, his clones and his children). Noticing Deadpool, a participating Spider-Bitch questions what he is doing there and why he interrupted the game, before joining the other Spider-People and Wolverines in chasing him out of the park.[19]

Old Man Hawkeye[]

In the prequel series Old Man Hawkeye (Jan.–Dec. 2018), set five years before Old Man Logan, after learning that his glaucoma will render him completely blind in a matter of weeks due to, Clint visits a 17-year-old Ashley in Hammer Falls, Nevada so that he can see her with his own eyes for the last time; after Clint notes she has a poster of a young him as Hawkeye on the wall (alongside posters of her grandfather Spider-Man and the Kingpin), Ashley references him atypically showing up every five years to see her. Hearing from Tonya that Ashley had recently gotten in trouble for fighting, Clint is initially proud to hear that she had beaten up a bully who had in turn been "beating up one of the fat kids" and stealing his money, only to learn that she had beaten them both up due the "fat kid" having been paying her for protection, and she was insulted by the "disrespect" he had showed by keeping money from her. Dismissing her father's attempts at small talk, Ashley asks Clint why he is really there. After she is dismissive of his vague response, Clint leaves Ashley be, leaving to fulfil his vendetta with the Thunderbolts before he is fully blind.[20] A few days later, Marshal Bullseye, tracking Clint's subsequent killings, visits Hammer Falls and questions Ashley about Clint (whom he rightfully suspects to be behind the killings) outside her mother's garage. After learning that Clint does not actually live there, ony coming around "once every few years when he feels guilty about knocking up my mother", Marshal Bullseye notices Ashley's lack of fear with regards to his appearance, even after pulling out a sai in front of her; Ashley references having killed the last man to stick a knife in her face. Impressed, and receiving word of a new "attack by assailant wielding bow", Marshal Bullseye tells Ashley ("little lady") that he will give Clint her regards when he sees him.[21] Later, while visiting Arcade's Murderworld, Nevada to kill Atlas, Clint briefly meets with an elderly Ruth "Blindfold" Aldine, who sees the "bloody road" he is on, "choosing to live for revenge", in particular Ashley's future as Spider-Bitch five years in the future, her attempt to kill him, and his own death days after, although only vaguely alluding to it and shaping images of her, Clint and Logan out of smoke.[22]

Spider-Geddon and Spider-Force[]

In the 2018 comics event Spider-Geddon and the spin-off mini-series Spider-Force,[23] Spider-Bitch recruits Spider-Kid, a 13-year-old Petey Parker, whom she nicknames "Gramps", to his great annoyance, to gain his assistance in preventing Otto (now the Superior Octopus) from unwittingly and unknowingly allowing the Inheritors to clone themselves new bodies,[24] following their earlier escape from their radioactive prison planet, allowing them to launch their attack on the Spider-Verse anew.[25] After failing to stop Otto, who is horrified by what he has done and returns to the mantle of the Superior Spider-Man while attempting to redeem himself; Spider-Bitch, Jessica Drew, Kaine Parker, Astro-Spider, and Spider-Kid meanwhile form a "Spider-Force" to travel to the Inheritors' former prison on an intended suicide mission (wearing hazmat suits) to destroy the abandoned crystal containing the soul of the Inheritors' father Solus, the most powerful Inheritor of them all to prevent his resurrection as well, coming into conflict with that universe's John Jameson.[24] Jameson, revealed to be a telepath, reads the Spider-Force's mind in order to be able to trust them: while doing so, a glimpse of Ashley Barton's childhood is seen: killing enforcers of the original Kingpin with a dirtbike and stealing cartons of milk for her community. After proceeding to a space station orbiting the planet, Ashley shares a moment of vulnerability with Petey after being briefly "touched" by the Inheritor Verna: Ashley recalls sitting on her reality's Peter's knee as a baby shortly before his death, before growing up in a wasteland of lies, abandonment and abuse.[26] After almost being killed by Verna, the duo escape in an escape pod before unwittingly unknowingly themselves delivering the Solus crystal to the Inheritors via Jessica.[27] After Solus is resurrected, Gwen Stacy / Spider-Gwen leads the new Spider-Army, including a returned Ashley as Spider-Bitch against the Inheritors, alongside a Captain Universe-enpowered Miles Morales, and with the Inheritors weakened thanks to a plan by Otto and Ben Reilly, the Spider-Army is able to achieve victory, binding the Inheritors (but for Morlun) in place before transferring their consciousnesses into the cloned bodies of babies and removing their hunger for Spider-Totems, truly recycling their souls. The Spider-Verse finally at peace, Spider-Bitch returns to her reality to resume her role as Kingpin of the Wastelands, contemplating her purpose in the world.[28]

Old Man Quill[]

In Old Man Quill, after returning to the Wastelands to find seven years to have passed (since Old Man Logan),[29] and Emperor Doom to have taken over her lands while she was fighting the Inheritors and travelling the multiverse,[30] Spider-Bitch is captured by his forces and made to regularly fight in gladiatorial combat in Rice–Eccles Stadium over the following months, with Doom appointing Taskmaster in her stead. After coming across a stranded elderly Peter Quill alongside her in the arena (who is hallucinating the deceased Guardians of the Galaxy talking to him and Rocket Raccoon flirting with her), Spider-Bitch is surprised to learn she will not be facing her usual opponents in combat, but a mind-controlled Fin Fang Foom.[31] After witnessing Spider-Bitch push a prisoner dressed like Captain America into a guard in order to steal the latter's spear, killing them both, before proceeding to attack Foom's ankles, Quill has Spider-Bitch give him a "Fastball Special", throwing him into one of the drones surrounding the arena in order to commandeer it, and use it to free Foom, who begins to incinerate the watching audience. Making her way to Taskmaster, Spider-Bitch mocks his age and competence before punching him multiple times in the face. After directing Quill on where to find the Ultimate Nullifier, a relic in the Baxter Building's ruins in New York which he is looking for, Spider-Bitch resumes her role as Kingpin of the Wastelands, overseeing the gladiatorial fights as her assistant arranges for her to watch Taskmaster take on her newly captured Venom-infused Tyrannosaurus rex.[32] Sometime later, after her men discover an army of Doombots to be coming in her direction, Spider-Bitch prepares a speech for her people to inspire them to fight and die on her behalf to protect "what's mine". After one of her assistants informs that they will surely all be killed the moment the Doombots arrive in the city based on the speed they are moving at, Spider-Bitch asks him to "show a little spine"; after seeing the Doombots blow past above the city, Spider-Bitch is surprised that she wasn't their intended target.[33] Later still, while sitting on her throne and holding a skull in her hands, Spider-Bitch is insulted when her television channels are replaced by a broadcast from Doom and Madame Masque of Quill's intended execution, which is interrupted by Galactus, who Quill then kills.[34][35]

Web of Spider-Bitch[]

In December 2021, after learning of the existence of the character, former Marvel Comics writer Sina Grace announced on Twitter that he planned to pitch a Spider-Bitch solo series to Marvel, tentatively entitled Web of Spider-Bitch.[3]

Alternate versions[]

Edge of Venomverse[]

Fifteen years after the events of Old Man Logan, Spider-Bitch (depicted as white due to a printing error) finally tracks down Logan (his escape the only "black mark on [her] reputation" as the Kingpin of the Wastelands) with the assistance of Bruce Banner Junior and Warren Worthington III, each respectively helping her after learning Logan to have been responsible for the deaths of their biological family and teammates respectively. After having Warren knock Logan out, Spider-Bitch strings him up with web shooters she acquired from her grandfather's corpse so the trio can taunt them, before releasing a Venom-infused Tyrannosaurus rex to eat him alive, keeping them at bay with web-whips. After Logan briefly tears himself free using his claws, Spider-Bitch webs them together again, only for Logan to take advantage of her lack of a Spider-Sense and use the momentum of her webs to pull her up into the air into the Tyrannosaurus's maw, killing her.[36]

Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe Again[]

In Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe Again, as a brainwashed Deadpool decapitates Miles Morales while flying on Green Goblin's glider, dressed as Spider-Man, he sees himself as a "Composite Spider-Man and Deadpool" ending "The Saga of the Spider-Verse Clone Conspiracy" by killing multiple Spider-People, including Spider-Bitch, and "put[ting] an end to this arachnid mayhem!"[37]

Powers and abilities[]

Despite her get-up, and being considered a Spider-Totem by the Inheritors and the Web of Life and Destiny, Spider-Bitch seemingly has none the powers of her grandfather Spider-Man (the ability to stick to surfaces and a spider-sense that warns them of danger), although nonetheless displaying a strength, speed, and agility allowing her to go toe-to-toe with superhuman, acquired through vigorous training and exercise.[38] oblivious to his lack of interest in her actions.[39]

In other media[]

Marvel's Wastelanders: Hawkeye[]

  • In the 2021 radio drama podcast Marvel's Wastelanders: Hawkeye, directed by Rachel Chavkin and written by J. Holtham, unlike the comic series, a 17-year-old Ash Morse, referred to in marketing as Ash Barton (voiced by Sasha Lane), is named in-full as Natasha Cassandra "Ash" Barton-Morse (née Bishop-Jones) and depicted as the biological daughter of Kate Bishop / Hawkeye and Jason Jones (the son of Luke Cage and Jessica Jones), left in the care of Clint Barton / Hawkeye and Bobbi Morse / Mockingbird by Bishop following Jones' sudden death, with no biological connection to Peter Parker / Spider-Man or superpowers of her own to speak of. Running for student government president in her high school on a platform of criticising the Kingdom of Zemo in which she lives, Ash is horrified when her best friend Max suffers a drug overdose of "Hype" (a drug granting superpowers to the consumer), which he had been ingesting in order to serve as her bodyguard, and is apparently explodes, killing himself alongside several other students. Swearing revenge, Ash learns the source of the drugs to be the Brotherhood Traveling Circus, Carnival and Ringmaster's Road Show, to which Clint is employed, and recruits him to find the distributor of the drugs to kill them, briefly reuniting with her birth mother Kate during the process. After learning Max's supplier to have been Frederick Dukes, Junior., Ash attempts to kill him before learning he had been manipulated by a Maynard "Ringmaster" Tiboldt, and that Max is actually still alive and safe, hidden by him in the woods neighbouring the circus, having teleported away after causing the explosion. Reunited with Max, Ash begins to question her desire for revenge and the path it will bring her down in life.[40][41]
    • Sometime later, Ash discovers that the current "King Zemo" is actually Zemo's teenage son Herman, who has been impersonating his father Helmut since his death ten years earlier using his mask and voice box. Upon being discovered, having been seeking an "out" from being king, Herman flees with his fortune while leaving Ash his mask and voice box, which she uses to become the new King Zemo and one of the seven dictators of the Wastelands.

Merchandise[]

  • In the Marvel Legends line of action figures, an Ashley Barton / Spider-Bitch figure was released by Hasbro in October 2016.[42]

Web series[]

  • In the Marvel TL;DR web series, two episodes are dedicated to Old Man Logan and Spider-Verse, in which Spider-Bitch is voiced by Brenna Hines.[43]

Video games[]

  • Spider-Bitch appears as a character skin in Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions and Spider-Man Unlimited,[44] but is referred to as Spider-Girl due to the child-oriented nature of the games.[44]

References[]

  1. ^ Penagos, Ryan (July 8, 2019). "This Week in Marvel History: July 5–July 11". Marvel.com. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
  2. ^ Whitbrook, James (July 14, 2017). "The Greatest Spider-Women of All Time, Ranked". Gizmodo. Retrieved July 14, 2017.
  3. ^ a b Grace, Sina [@SinaGrace] (December 2, 2021). "Today years old learning about Spider-Bitch! Writing an apology email to everyone at Marvel (yes even CB) and begging to get a mini-series with this character. The headline! "Sina Grace returns to Marvel for Web of Spider-Bitch." Like…this is real!!!???" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  4. ^ Johnston, Rich (December 2, 2021). "Hey Marvel, Sina Grace Has A Spider-Pitch for Spider-Bitch". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved December 2, 2021.
  5. ^ Bashir, Dale (December 6, 2021). "10 Spider-Man Variants Who Should Appear in 'Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse'". IGN. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  6. ^ Wolverine Vol. 3 #67 (September 2008) Marvel Comics.
  7. ^ Wolverine Vol. 3 #68 (October 2008) Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ Wolverine Vol. 3 #69 (November 2008) Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ Wolverine Vol. 3 #70 (December 2008) Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ All-New X-Men Annual Vol. 1 #1 (December 2014) Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Odorico, Alix (December 8, 2021). "Marvel: Spider-Woman's First Name Has Been Censored". Hitek. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  12. ^ The Superior Spider-Man #32 (September 2014) Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ Edge of Spider-Verse #1 (September 2014) Marvel Comics.
  14. ^ Spider-Verse #1 (November 2014) Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ The Superior Spider-Man #33 (September 2014) Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 3 #10–14 (November 2014–February 2015) Marvel Comics.
  17. ^ Spider-Verse Team-Up #3 (January 2015) Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ The Amazing Spider-Man Vol. 3 #15 (2014) Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ Deadpool: Too Soon? Infinite Comic #6. (September 2016) Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ Old Man Hawkeye #1 (January 2018) Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ Old Man Hawkeye #2 (February 2018) Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ Old Man Hawkeye #3 (March 2018) Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ Terror, Jude (October 27, 2018). "An Uncanny New Team Debuts in Next Week's Spider-Force #1". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  24. ^ a b Spider-Force #1 (October 2018) Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ Spider-Geddon #2–3 (October–November 2018) Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ Spider-Force #2 (November 2018) Marvel Comics.
  27. ^ Spider-Force #3 (December 2018) Marvel Comics.
  28. ^ Spider-Geddon #5 (October 2018) Marvel Comics.
  29. ^ Dead Man Logan #7 (May 2019) Marvel Comics.
  30. ^ Old Man Quill #2 (February 2019) Marvel Comics.
  31. ^ Old Man Quill #3 (March 2019) Marvel Comics.
  32. ^ Old Man Quill #4 (April 2019) Marvel Comics.
  33. ^ Old Man Quill #10 (October 2019) Marvel Comics.
  34. ^ Old Man Quill #12 (December 2019) Marvel Comics.
  35. ^ Matadeen, Renaldo (July 5, 2019). "Old Man Quill: What Happened to the Guardian of the Galaxy?". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved July 5, 2019.
  36. ^ Edge of Venomverse #4 (August 2017) Marvel Comics.
  37. ^ Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe Again #2. (June 2017) Marvel Comics.
  38. ^ McGuire, Liam (December 3, 2021). "A Spider-Verse Hero Has The Most Hilariously Inappropriate Hero Name". Screen Rant. Retrieved December 3, 2021.
  39. ^ History of the Marvel Universe Vol 2. #6 (December 2019) Marvel Comics.
  40. ^ "'Marvel's Wastelanders: Hawkeye' Scripted Podcast to Premiere October 4". Laughing Place. September 21, 2021. Retrieved September 21, 2021.
  41. ^ Levitt, Hayley (October 15, 2021). "A Marvel Podcast Is Rachel Chavkin's Latest Larger-Than-Life Stage". Playbill. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
  42. ^ Brown, Luke (October 6, 2016). "Marvel Legends Opens a Hole to the Spider-Verse [Review]". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved October 6, 2016.
  43. ^ Marvel Entertainment (December 9, 2016). "What is Spider-Verse? – Marvel TL;DR". YouTube. Retrieved December 9, 2016.
  44. ^ a b Infante, David (May 10, 2015). "Spider-Man Unlimited – See all the heroines in action". Gamer Focus. Retrieved May 10, 2015.

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