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Recently joining the intellectually inept ranks of Internet Explorer users (which happens to be a hoax) is the reporting staff of the Daily Mail as they took it upon themselves to announce to the planet in that Spider-Man may perhaps be gay. Bleeding Cool was kind enough to call them out on it.

This on the heels of the show in Ultimate Fallout #4 that the new Spider-Man, Miles Morales, is of mixed-race descent. The brand-new Webslinger isn’t a middle-class, white American. Great, we get it. At the end of the time, the race of a hero is of no consequence to The Rag and we’re not going to waste any more time writing about it. What is of ramification, though, is a declaration made by artist Sara Pichelli:

&#;Maybe sooner or later a black or same-sex attracted &#; or both &#; hero will be considered something absolutely normal.’

Taking her comment thoroughly out of context, the Mail declared in a headline: “Marvel Comics reveals the unused Spider Man is jet – and he could be gay in the future.” It seems that Pichelli was explaining her hope that in a perfect world, the race or sexual identity of a hero wouldn’t be given a second mind. Marvel has no plans of altering th

Do my eyes deceive me? Spider-Man news that doesn&#;t involve Tom Holland? Can you save us Britney Spears? Can we be saved? 

In terms of men in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, queer characters featured on screen include Loki, Deadpool, Korg and Phastos. When you factor in backing and supporting characters, this number hits almost a dozen. 

While Spider-Man has yet to feature a gay webslinger while exploring the Multiverse, one does exist in comic manual form &#; who was introduced in Edge of the Spiderverse in September  

But that doesn&#;t represent its creators are shying away from LGBT advocacy. The little pride flags on sale on a street corner in the first Spider-Man game were duly noted. The sequel, however, is showing that everyone is worthy of a little help from a popular superhero. 

As noted by The Gamer, here&#;s a list of LGBT representation in Spider-Man 2:

  • LGBT supportive lane art featured throughout the city
  • Street flags that portray all members of the queer spectrum including homosexual pride, trans pride and respect for other orientations including pansexual and asexual
  • Black Cat, a burglar akin to Catwoman in DC, is bisexual 
  • A side-quest where you h

    Review of Marvel&#;s Spider-man: Miles Morales

    Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales is the latest addition to the Spider-Man video game franchise. The free lends itself to the popularity of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. This was the first movie about Spider-man characters, other than Peter Parker. It was also the first hour a person of dye was the star in a Spider-Man movie. But, how does this all translate into a video game experience?

    History of Spider-Man

    In , Stan Lee released the first Spider-man comic. By the late 70s, his popularity was cemented into the world of Marvel comics and he was becoming one of the most popular heroes. The first video game came to the Atari system in It was a simple vertical scroller, building climber catching poor guys.

    By the s, we were seeing Spider-Man starring in fighting side scroller styles. Super NES released Spider-Man vs. Venom: Maximum Carnage where you could play as either personality. Then on to Capcom spongey Marvel Super Heroes. These played similar to X-men: Children of the Atom.

    Sony took their first shot at a Spider-Man video game in This game was built off of the Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater engine. However, it

    gay miles morales

    The Case For Gay Miles Morales [Pride Week]

     

    Everyone needs a Spider-Man. Sure, Peter Parker might be wonderful for some people, but my Spider-Man was always Mayday Parker from the MC2. I want Spider-Man to be anyone. I want there to be a Spider-Man that every comic reader can name with. When Brian Michael Bendis and Sara Pichelli unleashed Miles Morales on the world, it was a godsend. Despite how wonderful Tom Holland is, I still think Miles should have been the Spider-Man we saw in Captain America: Civil War.

    When I was younger, I was depressed a lot. I'm queer, it's not too unexpected. What got me through that was reading massive amounts of Spidey comics. And while I love every issue I read of Amazing Spider-Man and Ultimate Spider-Man, Peter Parker doesn't represent me. Sure, he's white, and a dork, but that's kinda it.

    Before I even knew I was a girl (remember not knowing your gender? didn't it suck?) I loved Mayday. I felt connected to her in some weird primal way. I had a small, manga-sized collection of her comics. I still have it today. It's falling apart, front and back covers gone, about forty pages in the middle

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